So, thanks for the link. Will watch more and say more anon. — Baden
They found that children elicit more responses from adults by making speech-like sounds and parents were less responsive to non-speech sounds. The research has implications for understanding how language and social skills develop and why children with autism develop speech more slowly than their peers. — LENA Research Foundation
The researchers observed increased sensitivity by adults with more education to the sounds the children produced. This likely encourages faster speech development for children in families with a higher socioeconomic status.
What's this --- we are happy to strive to agree? In some instances we co-operate and truly do strive to agree, happily. But in other instances, like in the philosophy forum, we happily disagree. — Metaphysician Undercover
Do you see a difference between knowing how a word was used, and the act of using a word? If you associate meaning with use, then I would say that knowing the meaning of a word is knowing how the word was used. This accounts for the fact that the same word has different meaning in different instances of use. Meaning is specific to the instance of use, and knowing its meaning is knowing how it was used in that particular instance. — Metaphysician Undercover
He chronicled the development of his son's speech. Time accelerated motion analysis from bud to blossom, if you like. But really from 'gaga' to 'water'. Real world. And mostly jargon-free.
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=RE4ce4mexrU — Amity
That was really cool. That kind of data visualization though is everywhere right now. When you hear 'big data', that's what it involves. That kind of stuff is now the bread and butter of Facebook, Google and so on — StreetlightX
I was taught not to magically whisk out what is in my pants at a moment's notice. Such things are frowned upon and can get you in a lot of trouble. — Fooloso4
I'm surprised you can't see the strife as striving for agreement? No one need assume that any eventual settlement must be congenial for all parties. — bongo fury
Do you associate meaning with use? (Or were you just interrogating T Clark on the point?) I certainly do associate the two. Equate them, even. — bongo fury
I'm guessing you can't mean "there is no such thing as 'using something' in a general sense because each instance of using something is unique and particular"? — bongo fury
Rather, you are saying you oppose dignifying a narrower, technical sense of "use" whereby it means, more specifically, "using a word to refer to something" (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Use–mention_distinction)? You want instead to emphasise and keep in play the very general sense of "using something in some way"? Resist reducing linguistic "use" to the mere pointing of words at things? — bongo fury
Such a disagreement between us (where you resist what I embrace) is what I said I expected to be the case, yes. Do you agree this is the disagreement? — bongo fury
That's the first thing that pooped into my mind, too. The young child probably meant "shit" by "function". Sub "pooh pooh" for "function" and it all makes sense all of a sudden.How does the term 'function' function for our precocious three year old girl? Perhaps "function" means "I want it" and she is not going to give it up.
5 days ago — Fooloso4
There is no such thing as "use" in a general sense because each instance of using something is unique and particular. — Metaphysician Undercover
That sticks like shit to a blanket! — Janus
bongo fury
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As expected, very different views on "use". Thanks for the clarification. — bongo fury
There is no such thing as "use" in a general sense because each instance of using something is unique and particular. — Metaphysician Undercover
Are we willing going to go down the road that we can't use language to speak in the general sense? All word meanings are unique and particular? — Marchesk
Maybe I misunderstand, but if so, I can't help but think something has gone badly wrong. It's language's ability to generalize which is so very useful. — Marchesk
I.e., there is no such thing as anything. — god must be atheist
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