Department of Linguistics, University of Pennsylvania.
Cognitive Development Center, Central European University.
Cogn Sci. 2020 Apr;44(4):e12832. doi: 10.1111/cogs.12832.
How do speakers learn the social meaning of different linguistic variants, and what factors influence how likely a particular social-linguistic association is to be learned? It has been argued that the social meaning of more salient variants should be learned faster, and that learners' pre-existing experience of a variant will influence its salience. In this paper, we report two artificial-language-learning experiments investigating this. Each experiment involved two language-learning stages followed by a test. The first stage introduced the artificial language and trained participants in it, while the second stage added a simple social context using images of cartoon aliens. The first learning stage was intended to establish participants' experience with the artificial language in general and with the distribution of linguistic variants in particular. The second stage, in which linguistic stimuli were accompanied by images of particular aliens, was intended to simulate the acquisition of linguistic variants in a social context. In our first experiment, we manipulated whether a particular linguistic variant, associated with one species of alien in the second learning phase, had been encountered in the first learning phase. In the second experiment, we manipulated whether the variant had been encountered in the same grammatical context. In both cases we predicted that the unexpectedness of a new variant or a new grammatical context for an old variant would increase the variant's salience and facilitate the learning of its social meaning. This is what we found, although in the second experiment, the effect was driven by better learners. Our results suggest that unexpectedness increases the salience of variants and makes their social distribution easier to learn, deepening our understanding of the role of individual language experience in the acquisition of sociolinguistic meaning.
说话者如何学习不同语言变体的社会意义,以及哪些因素影响特定社会语言联想被学习的可能性?有人认为,更突出的变体的社会意义应该更快地被学习,而且学习者对变体的预先存在的经验会影响其突出性。在本文中,我们报告了两个调查这一问题的人工语言学习实验。每个实验都包括两个语言学习阶段和一个测试阶段。第一阶段介绍了人工语言并对参与者进行了培训,而第二阶段则使用卡通外星人的图像添加了一个简单的社会背景。第一学习阶段旨在建立参与者对人工语言的一般经验,特别是对语言变体分布的经验。第二阶段,语言刺激伴随着特定外星人的图像,旨在模拟社会语境中语言变体的习得。在我们的第一个实验中,我们操纵了在第二学习阶段与一种外星物种相关的特定语言变体是否在第一学习阶段遇到过。在第二个实验中,我们操纵了该变体是否在相同的语法上下文中遇到过。在这两种情况下,我们都预测新变体的意外性或旧变体的新语法上下文将增加变体的突出性,并促进其社会意义的学习。这正是我们发现的,尽管在第二个实验中,效果是由更好的学习者驱动的。我们的结果表明,意外性增加了变体的突出性,使它们的社会分布更容易学习,加深了我们对个体语言经验在社会语言意义习得中的作用的理解。