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A History of Psycholinguistics

The Pre-Chomskyan Era

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How do we manage to speak and understand language? How do children acquire these skills, and how does the brain support them? These psycholinguistic issues have been explored for over two centuries. While many Psycholinguists trace their field's origins to the Chomskyan "cognitive revolution" of the late 1950s and 1960s, empirical psycholinguistics actually dates back to the late 18th century. This book comprehensively covers this "pre-Chomskyan" history, detailing the contributions of doctors, pedagogues, linguists, and psychologists who shaped the discipline. It examines key discoveries about brain language regions, word access in speaking and listening, children's syntax invention, and language disruption in aphasia. The narrative intertwines the history of ideas with the lives of those whose insights, fads, fallacies, and rivalries contributed to the field. By the end of the 19th century, psycholinguistics had established itself, merging four historical roots: comparative linguistics, brain language studies, child development diaries, and experimental approaches to speech processing. These perspectives evolved into divergent frameworks throughout the 20th century, influenced by various psychological schools. The book also addresses the field's disruption during the Third Reich and its resurgence in the 1950s, driven by the mathematical theory of communication. This essential reading is a tour de force from a seminal figure

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A History of Psycholinguistics, Willem J. M. Levelt

Language
Released
2013
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Title
A History of Psycholinguistics
Subtitle
The Pre-Chomskyan Era
Language
English
Released
2013
Format
Paperback
Pages
672
ISBN10
0198712219
ISBN13
9780198712213
Series
Description
How do we manage to speak and understand language? How do children acquire these skills, and how does the brain support them? These psycholinguistic issues have been explored for over two centuries. While many Psycholinguists trace their field's origins to the Chomskyan "cognitive revolution" of the late 1950s and 1960s, empirical psycholinguistics actually dates back to the late 18th century. This book comprehensively covers this "pre-Chomskyan" history, detailing the contributions of doctors, pedagogues, linguists, and psychologists who shaped the discipline. It examines key discoveries about brain language regions, word access in speaking and listening, children's syntax invention, and language disruption in aphasia. The narrative intertwines the history of ideas with the lives of those whose insights, fads, fallacies, and rivalries contributed to the field. By the end of the 19th century, psycholinguistics had established itself, merging four historical roots: comparative linguistics, brain language studies, child development diaries, and experimental approaches to speech processing. These perspectives evolved into divergent frameworks throughout the 20th century, influenced by various psychological schools. The book also addresses the field's disruption during the Third Reich and its resurgence in the 1950s, driven by the mathematical theory of communication. This essential reading is a tour de force from a seminal figure