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Critical Period Hypothesis

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Sprachjunge
Diglot
Senior Member
Germany
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368 posts - 548 votes 
Speaks: English*, GermanC2
Studies: Spanish, Russian

 
 Message 1 of 60
16 May 2005 at 2:28pm | IP Logged 
I just wanted to point out that the ''critical PERIOD hypothesis'' is what Eric was referring to. It is the hypothesis put forth in the late sixties/early seventies that a child can only acquire language in a period extending from infancy to early puberty. After that, the ability is lost forever. The two most famous case studies providing support include a French ''wildboy'' who was then taken under the wing of a psychologist, and ''Jeannie,'' a girl who was abused by her parents, kept tied to a potty, and never taught English. Both subjects, despite intensive language instruction by sympathetic professionals, never acquired anything approaching proficiency in any tongue.

According to certain pyschologists, the relevant point for us, as second-, third-, and fifteenth-language learners, is that this period is the ONLY time in which native fluency in a language can be achieved. Not just a high degree of proficiency, mind you, but native fluency in the strictest sense.

A most depressing notion...

Edited by Sprachjunge on 16 May 2005 at 2:29pm

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ANK47
Triglot
Senior Member
United States
thearabicstudent.blo
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 Message 2 of 60
26 June 2005 at 6:34pm | IP Logged 
    I understand the crictical period theory to mean that if you don't acquire ANY language by the time you reach puberty then you never will. I don't think it applies to people who have already learned 1 or more languages by the time they hit this "critical" time and want to become fluent in more languages.
   
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M-Squared
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United States
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Speaks: English*
Studies: German, Spanish

 
 Message 3 of 60
26 June 2005 at 7:14pm | IP Logged 
I'd like to see some references to the assertion that "After age XX you
cannot learn another language fluently." I think the real case is somewhat
narrower. There was an interesting demonstration of the issue on a US
television program. What they showed was the the brain forms sound
pattern recognition features in babyhood that are based on sounds in the
language they hear. So, if the language you hear does not discriminate
between two sounds (call them A and B), and those sounds are similar
enough, past a certain age you will not be able to learn to discriminate
between the sounds A and B.

The demonstration worked like this. They made a recording of somebody
saying two words, I'll call them A and B. To the English speaking audience
the words were the same, but to the native speaker of the language (in
the demonstration a Native American language) they were entirely
different words. Then they played back a recorded sequence of the words
A, A, A, A, etc., and eventually a B in the sequence. A child sits in the
room listening to the sequence (usually on Mom's lap, since these were
very young children). To the side of the baby is a case full of toys hidden
in darkness. Just after the word B is spoken on the tape the toy case lights
up and all toys become active.

When the child is below a critical age, something like 1 or 2 years as I
recall, they quickly learn to look at the toy case as soon as they hear "B,"
having learned to anticipate the action. Beyond the critical age they never
learn to do that, they cannot discriminate the two sets of sounds.

I think this has a very narrow meaning. If two languages share a common
sound set then there should be no age limit on learning one having
learned the other. But, if the target language has sound discrimination
that does not occur in the mother language then it may be impossible to
learn to discriminate the sounds later.

Having only seen this as a television program, I'd really like a real,
scientific reference to the phenomena. It would also be interesting to
know how wide spread the issue is among major languages, although it
certainly is an issue for some exotic languages.

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guillaume
Pentaglot
Groupie
France
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Speaks: French*, English, German, Spanish, Japanese
Studies: Mandarin

 
 Message 4 of 60
27 June 2005 at 4:54pm | IP Logged 
Well, to counter that television program, you saw M-Squared, I think that
it takes more time to learn to distinguish a sound when you grow older
but, eventually, it is possible to make the distinction.

Let's take the example of mandarin, mandarin is a tonal language and
tones are not a familiar concept to french speakers. Yet I know some
people, myself, included who did learn to make the differences between
the tones even when the words are spoken quickly.

There are other sounds that are alien to the French language and that I
learned to recognize. For example, the sound 'ch' in the German 'ich', is
different from the sound 'ch' in French and more closely ressembles the
'x' in pinyin in Mandarin (for example 'xin' new).

So I believe that if you would let the experiment last enough, eventually
the children would be able to differentiate the two sets of sounds. But it's
true that it would probably take a lot longer than if they were 1 or 2.
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ProfArguelles
Moderator
United States
foreignlanguageexper
Joined 7267 days ago

609 posts - 2102 votes 

 
 Message 5 of 60
27 June 2005 at 5:56pm | IP Logged 
It is a simple fact that a language aquired before puberty will be spoken with native accent and intonation, while a language learned after puberty will always bear some traces of the speaker's first language speech rhythms. However, adults can actually learn languages more effectively and more swiftly than children when they apply themselves in a disciplined and intelligent fashion.
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M-Squared
Senior Member
United States
Joined 7150 days ago

117 posts - 118 votes 
Speaks: English*
Studies: German, Spanish

 
 Message 6 of 60
28 June 2005 at 8:39pm | IP Logged 
I thought of the example of Chinese and its tones, Guillaume, but I didn't
think it was a good counterexample. While western languages don't use
tones as Chinese does, we do use tones. A basic sentence can be a
question, a statement, an order, sarcastic, a threat, or other things with
rhythm and tone pronunciation differences. This isn't like Chinese, but it
does mean that a Western child hears lots of tones and learns that tone
and/or rhythm change meaning.

As I understand, however, there are other sound differences that, while
they might occur in Western languages, don't mean anything. So, if you
say A or B it won't change the meaning. The interpretation of the
experiment was that in those cases you lose the ability to discriminate A
and B at a relatively young age.

Since I don't trust a television program, I'd really like a real reference and
precise example, and was hoping somebody on this list might have one.
As I remember, Ardaschir noted some sound differences in Korean in a
post that don't occur in Western languages and that he found very
difficult to distinguish even after years in the country. If I could find the
post, I'd note it, but I can't find it now. Maybe Ardaschir would comment?

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jradetzky
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United Kingdom
geocities.com/jradet
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1 sounds
Speaks: Spanish*, EnglishC2, GermanB1

 
 Message 7 of 60
29 June 2005 at 9:37am | IP Logged 
In Mexico there's a widespread belief that if you don't learn English as a young child, you never will. False.

Based on this misconception many parents send their children to bilingual schools. Surprisingly, most of these children never reach real proficiency because they simply lack motivation and discipline.

I am convinced that any adult can learn a language if he really has the motivation, the time and the right technique to do so.
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ProfArguelles
Moderator
United States
foreignlanguageexper
Joined 7267 days ago

609 posts - 2102 votes 

 
 Message 8 of 60
29 June 2005 at 7:14pm | IP Logged 
Korean has many "doubled" or "stressed" consonants in addition to regular ones. For those who can read the script, I refer to ㅂ/ㅃ, ㄷ/ㄸ, ㄱ/ㄲ, ㅈ/ㅉ, and ㅅ/ㅆ. To this day, I have trouble distinguishing them, which is more an active than a passive problem. That is, I don't hear the difference, but this doesn't seem to affect my comprehension. However, almost inevitably if a Korean fails to understand my speech because of a weakness in pronunciation, it is because I am failing to "double" or "stress" a consonant. When I then try to pronounce it strongly, they laugh at the degree of effort it takes me measured by the way I have to contort my face. This after nearly ten years in the country, marrying a native, publishing numerous scholarly works on the language, and generally being about as fluent as an adult foreign learner can hope to become in it. Sigh.


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