268 Chapter
8
Cognition
and Language
“Why won’t the dog eat?” Listeners understand both sentences equally well. Learn-
ing theory, then, has diffi culty fully explaining language acquisition.
Nativist Approaches: Language as an Innate Skill.
Pointing to such problems with
learning-theory approaches to language acquisition, linguist Noam Chomsky (1968,
1978, 1991) provided a groundbreaking alternative. Chomsky argued that humans
are born with an innate linguistic capability that emerges
primarily as a function of
maturation. According to his
nativist approach to language, all the world’s languages
share a common
underlying structure called a universal grammar . Chomsky sug-
gested that the human brain has a neural system, the
language-acquisition device
that not only lets us understand the structure language provides, but also gives us
strategies and techniques for learning the unique characteristics of our native lan-
guage (McGilvray, 2004; Lidz & Gleitman, 2004; White, 2007).
Chomsky used the concept of the language-acquisition
device as a metaphor,
and he did not identify a specifi c area of the brain in which it resides. However,
evidence collected by neuroscientists suggests that the ability to use language, which
was a signifi cant evolutionary advance in human beings, is tied to specifi c neuro-
logical developments (Sakai, 2005; Sahin, Pinker, & Halgren, 2006; Willems &
Hagoort, 2007).
For example, scientists have discovered a gene related
to the development of
language abilities that may have emerged as recently—in evolutionary terms—as
100,000 years ago. Furthermore, it is clear that there are specifi c sites within the brain
that are closely tied to language and that the shape of the human mouth and throat
are tailored to the production of speech. And there is evidence that features of specifi c
types of languages
are tied to particular genes, such as in “tonal” languages in which
pitch is used to convey meaning (Hauser, Chomsky, & Fitch, 2002; Chandra, 2007;
Dediu & Ladd, 2007; Gontier, 2008; Grigorenko, 2009).
Still, Chomsky’s view has its critics. For instance, learning theorists contend that
the apparent
ability of certain animals, such as chimpanzees, to learn the fundamen-
tals of human language (as we discuss later in this module) contradicts the innate
linguistic capability view.
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