著名语言学家John Lucy教授将来我校讲学
应上海外国语大学《外国语》编辑部邀请,世界著名语言学家、芝加哥大学教授John Lucy先生将前来我校讲学,具体信息如下:
题目:Linguistic Relativity, Semantic Accent①, and Human Development
主讲人:John Lucy
时间:2012年10月15日(星期一),15:00-17:00
地点:上海外国语大学虹口校区逸夫图书馆六楼报告厅606室
主办方:《外国语》编辑部
主讲人简介:
John A. Lucy received his Ph.D. in Human Development from the
Lucy''s research focuses on the relation between language and thought, especially on the role language plays in shaping thought. He has done over thirty years of ethnographic, linguistic, and psychological research among the Mayan-speaking people of the
Lucy has been Guggenheim Fellow, a Mellon Fellow at the Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences, and, on three occasions, a Visiting Fellow at the Max Planck Institute for Psycholinguistics. He has received major research grants from the National Endowment for the Humanities, the National Institutes of Mental Health, the Department of Education, the Social Science Research Council, and the Spencer Foundation. He has served as an officer in the Society for Linguistic Anthropology and the Society for Psychological Anthropology. At the
内容摘要:
This lecture will provide an overview of his research on linguistic relativity, semantic accent, and their implications for our view of human development. He will begin by providing some historical and conceptual background on the study of linguistic relativity, that is, the proposal that the language we speak affects the way we think. He will then describe his research on this topic, focusing on the impact of different verbal number marking patterns in English and Maya on nonlinguistic cognition such as perception, classification, and memory. He will then describe his more recent developmental research, which shows that relativity effects first appear during middle childhood. This will set the stage for a discussion of the changes in verbal abilities in middle childhood, both new verbal skills and increasing susceptibility to linguistic relativity and what he calls “semantic accent.” He concludes with some reflections on what this research suggests for human development and the scientific research enterprise itself.
Note:
① Lucy (in press) uses the term “semantic accent” to describe habits of thought that become more entrenched over time—just as we gradually lose the ability to make the sounds of a foreign language, so might we lose the ability to think in the terms of a foreign grammar. (quoted from Language as Lens: Plurality Marking and Numeral Learning in English, Japanese, and Russian,B.W. Sarnecka, V.G. Kamenskaya, T. Ogura, Y. Yamana, & J.B.Yudovina. www.wjh.harvard.edu/~lds/pdfs/sarnecka20... )