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What is Piaget's theory of language and thought
-Language depends on thought
- A child's understanding of a concept comes first and they they learn how to express their understanding
- Children only understand concepts when they have reached the right stage of cognitive development (language can exist first but won't be understood)
What is a strength of Piaget's theory of language development
Cromer's study showed that children use phrases suck as 'mummy sock' which shows that the children already have an understanding of the relationship between people and objects
What is a weakness of Piaget's theory of language development
Opposing theory - The Sapir-Whorf hypothesis suggests the opposite, yuo cant understand something that is not available to them
What is the Sapir-Whorf hypothesis
-Thinking depends on language and that words influence our thoughts, memories ,and perception
Strong version for the Sapir-Whorf hypothesis
Language determines thought - If a language has no words for a thought, the people that speak the language will have no way of expressing themselves for it. Inuit people have 23 words for snow so they can think about it in more detail than languages with less words for it
Weak version of the Sapir-Whorf hypothesis (the better one)
•Argues that language influences the way that we think - for example, English speakers do not have as many words for different types of snow as Inuit speakers, but this does not prevent English speakers from thinking of different types of snow, it is just harder for them than the Inuits.
•However, having the words makes it easier to distinguish between the different types of snow
What is a strength of the Sapir-Whorf hypothesis
It explains the link between language and intelligence - A study showed that a child's intelligence could depend on the language they hear and speak
What is a weakness of the Sapir-Whorf hypothesis
Thoughts come before language - js because a culture has more words does not mean that they came first.
- Maybe the Inuits have more words for snow because the come across it more often
What was Whorf's conclusions from the Hopi
The Hopi language is 'timeless' because they do not refer to past present and future in their speech
Carmichael (1932) aim & method
-The way that something is described can effect recall
-Both groups were told to draw the pictures from memory with different meanings to the pictures
Carmichael (1932) results & evaluation
-The memory of the picture is effected by the verbal label
- A weakness of this is that we do not do that in real life and we are not always interpreting ambiguous information
Language affects on recall of colour
Roberson et al. found that the Berinmo people of New Guinea had difficulty recalling and distinguishing between a variety of colours as they only have five words for different colours in their own language. This is evidence for the Sapir-Whorf hypothesis as it suggested that specific cognitive processes are influenced by language.
Evaluate Language affects on recall of colour
A weakness is that different researcher found a different result - People that only knew colours as 'light' and 'dark' did the same on a colour test as English-speaking people
What is non-verbal communication
communication without words e.g. body language
How is eye contact used
1) Regulating flow of conversation - It gives the other person feedback on the listener's interest. Eye contact was important when 'turn taking' in conversation
2) Signalling attraction - One of the first signals that we use to communicate is to look at them. A study suggested that people that maintain eye contact are more attractive.
3) Expressing emotion - particularly how intense they are. Joy and anger were most intense when there was direct gaze, and sadness and fear with an averted gaze
What is a weakness of eye contact studies
Not reliable - they used scales for participants to make judgements. these sorts of things are subjective to the person, meaning that they could not produce sufficient evidence
[EXTRA] What is a weakness of eye contact studies
Artificial studies - in one of the studies, they were asked to get to know somebody in an artificial environment so it would not be the same as real life`
What is body language
non-verbal communication such as facial expressions, gestures,and posture
What is open and closed posture
Open posture - More relaxed and shows approval/acceptance - It has an effect on communicaiton
Closed posture - Crossing arms/legs, showing disagreement with what is said
What is postural echo
mirroring someone's body positions/posture in a social interaction - Postural echo makes a person more likely to agree with somebody
Touch
Touch can affect attitudes towards people
What is a strength of body language studies
Can be applied to real-world situations - To create a good relationship with a person, you would use postural echo and an open posture
What is a weakness of body language studies
Ethical issues - In the studies of posture and touch, they were not told that they were in a study - they need informed consent
What is personal space
The distance that we keep ourselves from others in everyday life, like a bubble
How would cultural differences affect personal space
In some cultures, such as Saudi Arabia, personal space is much less than in countries like the UK - In warmer countries, people kept a closer distance to strangers but a further distance for friends
How does gender differences affect personal space
Men generally have a larger social distance than women with the same gender. Men sit opposite to each other whereas women sit side by side
How does status affect personal space
Status might be defined as someone's rank in society
- Zahn found people who have a similar status maintain a closer personal space by observing 45 workers from a manufacturing firm.
What is a strength of personal space research
Real world application - understanding cultural and gender differences helps to not offend people in everyday life
What is a weakness of personal space research
Unrepresentative samples - The studies were only done on a small number of people, meaning that they cannot be generalised to the whole population
What was the aim of Von Frisch's bee study
To carefully describe the dances performed by bees and explain how these enabled bees to communicate with each other
What was the method of Von Frisch's bee study
-He was and ethologist so he studied animals
-He would change aspects of the bees' environment to study how this changed their behaviour e.g. put food close to the hive and some further away
-He made more than 6000 controlled observations of honey bees over 20 years
What were the results of Von Frisch's bee study
-The bees made different movements depending on the distance of the food source.
-If the food was less than 100m away the bees moved around in a circle, sometimes changing direction, telling other bees the food source is close. This was called the round dance.
-He found another dance called the waggled dance, in which they moved in a figure of 8 pattern. The direction of the straight section indicates the direction of the food source and the speed indicates the distance. (slower = further away).
What were the conclusions from Von Frisch's bee study
Bees have a sophisticated form of communication
The dance gave the other bees valuable information
What is a strength of Von Frisch's bee study
-A strength of this study is that it made contributions to science
-His studies were based on careful observations, and he opened people's eyes to the capabilities of animals, and won a Nobel prize
What is a weakness if Von Frisch's bee study
-He overlooked other factors
- A study by Harald Esch found that when bees did the dance is silence, other bees would not go and investigate for sources
What are the four functions of animal communication
-Survival
-Reproduction
-Territory
-Food
[Animal Communication] Survival
Vocal signals: Vervet monkeys communicate danger with an alarm signal
Visual signal: Rabbits lift tail, pin ears back and leap forward
-Enhances survival of the individual (and group.)
[Animal Communication] Reproduction
-To attract a mate, many animals use mating signals e.g. peacocks stretches out its plumage
-Such mating displays have been developed to communicate the genetic fitness of an individual
[Animal Communication] Territory
Rhinos leave big piles of dung to communicate territorial boundaries
[Animal Communication] Food
Ants leave pheromone trail to communicate food source
What are the 3 main differences between human and animal communication
-Planning ahead and discussing future events
-Creativity
-Single vs multiple channels
[Human vs. Animal Communication] Planning ahead and discussing future events
-Humans are able to talk about things that are not present or that haven't happened yet - called displacement
-Animals tend to focus on things that are physically present
[Human vs. Animal Communication] Creativity
-Animal communication is a closed system, which means that their gestures,sounds and movements can only refer to specific events
-Humans have an open system, meaning words can be combined in many new ways
[Human vs. Animal Communication] Single vs multiple channels
-Humans can express things by speaking, writing and many other systems.
-Animals tend to only be able to use single channels e.g. ants us pheromones
Darwin and evolution
-Evolutionary theory of natural selection
-Survival is not important, but reproduction is
- Darwin said characteristics and behaviours that promote survival and reproduction are adaptive
Darwin's evolutionary theory
-Animals non verbal communications are evolved and adaptive e.g animals baring their teeth
-Humans and animals have comparisons in evolutionary expressions e.g. wrinkling your nose
-Serviceable habits - some traits that we had before are not as useful nowadays like baring teeth
What is a strength of Darwin's evolutionary theory
-Supportive research
-Paul Ekman et al. identified six primary emotions, which were associated with the same facial expressions in every culture, which suggests that evolution is the same fro all
What is a weakness of Darwin's evolutionary theory
it has difficulty explaining the cultural differences in non verbal communication,. so all non verbal communication should be the same all around the world