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| أدوات الموضوع | انواع عرض الموضوع |
07-21-2022, 10:17 AM | #4301 |
{رَبِّ ابْنِ لِي عِندَكَ بَيْتًا فِي الْجَنَّةِ}.🤍
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• Psycholinguists make a distinction between:
➢ Low level processes which involve the raw data of speech or writing ➢ High level processes which involve shaping this data into meaning. For example, reading involves two distinct operations: 1. A reader decodes the words on the page, and notes the sequence in which they appear. 2. Once words have been recognized; he / she then has to build meaning at the level of the sentence and at the level of the text as a whole. These two operations would appear to involve different degrees of attention and even different parts of the brain. |
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07-21-2022, 10:18 AM | #4302 |
{رَبِّ ابْنِ لِي عِندَكَ بَيْتًا فِي الْجَنَّةِ}.🤍
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• Three important issues emerge in relation to language and the
brain: 1. Comparison → In what way do our brains differ from those of other primates which do not possess language? 2. Localization → Where is language located in the brain? 3. Lateralization → Is there a difference in the way the right side and left side of the brain contribute to language? At what age does that difference become established? |
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07-21-2022, 10:19 AM | #4303 |
{رَبِّ ابْنِ لِي عِندَكَ بَيْتًا فِي الْجَنَّةِ}.🤍
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• In what way do our brains differ from those of other primates
which do not possess language? |
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07-21-2022, 10:20 AM | #4304 |
{رَبِّ ابْنِ لِي عِندَكَ بَيْتًا فِي الْجَنَّةِ}.🤍
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Nativists argue that a human infant must have some kind of
genetically transmitted language faculty in order to acquire language as rapidly and successfully as it does. If that is the case, then we can expect the human brain to be different in structure from those of primates not capable of language. |
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07-21-2022, 10:21 AM | #4305 |
{رَبِّ ابْنِ لِي عِندَكَ بَيْتًا فِي الْجَنَّةِ}.🤍
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Cognitivists suggest that differences in the operation of the
human brain are what enabled us to evolve language when other species could not. |
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