Language Production
Language Production
1. Listening
2. Speaking
3. Reading
4. Writing
5. Grammar
6. Vocabulary
In psycholinguistics, language production
refers to speaking and writing. When we
speak or write even a few words, we
generate new language, thus known as
production. This is opposed to language
comprehension in psycholinguistics, which
means understanding language conveyed
to you bu listening to speech or reading
written text.
Although a common caricature of speaking is
that it is the reverse of listening, language
production processes fundamentally differ
from comprehension processes in many
respects. Whereas people typically recognize
the words in their native language quickly and
automatically, the same words require an
intention to speak and can take over five times
longer to generate than to recognize.
In linguistics, language
production is the production of
spoken or written language. It
describes all of the stages
between having a concept, and
translating that concept into
linguistic form.
The Speech Communication Chain
When we use language, we use it to communicate an idea
from our minds to the minds of someone else.
The key elements in any
communication system are :
An information source
A transmitter
A signal
A receiver
A destination
Levelt’s model of speech production
Conceptualization
Formulation:
- Grammatical encoding (selection of syntactic frame and
lexical items)
- Phonological encoding (specification of phonetic form)
Articulation
During conceptualization, we develop an intention and select relevant
information from the internal (memory) or external (stimuli) environment to
create an utterance.
For example, break can be considered a lemma, which is the basis for other
forms such as break, breaks, broke, broken and breaking.
The third level is the process of articulation, which involves two steps
corresponding to grammatical encoding and phonological encoding.
Putting these basic elements together, Meyer (2000) introduced the « Standard
Model of Word-form Encoding » as a summation of Levelt’s model.
Surprisingly, the length of a word does not have a large effect on how
long it takes to begin saying it. Once word frequency is controlled for,
it takes about the same amount of time to begin to say caterpillar as it
does to begin to say cat. Caterpillar will take longer to physically
pronounce, but all of the stages of speech production up to articulation
take about the same amount of time regardless of word length.
Thank you for your time!