
THE NATURAL ORDERRows of images show an English speaker (top) and a Turkish speaker (bottom) using gestures to describe a scene in which they saw a captain swinging a pail. The English speaker conveys the captain by making a gesture for his cap; the Turkish speaker does so by pointing at a picture of the captain. S. Goldin-Meadow
We all order in the same way, no matter what language we
speak. That neat trick occurs in the course of daily affairs, not in an
Esperanto-only restaurant. People nonverbally represent all kinds of events in
a consistent order that corresponds to subject-object-verb, even if they speak
a language such as English that uses a different ordering scheme, a new study
finds.
The findings challenge the more than 60-year-old idea that a
person’s native language orchestrates the way he or she thinks about the world.
Instead, a universal, nonverbal preference for ordering events in a particular
way exists apart from language, propose psychologist Susan Goldin-Meadow of the
University of Chicago and her colleagues.
“This order is found in the earliest stages of newly
evolving sign languages and may reflect a natural disposition that humans
exploit when creating language anew,” Goldin-Meadow says.
The new study makes a good case for a common, unspoken
approach to representing sequences of events, remarks psychologist Larissa
Samuelson of the University of Iowa in Iowa
City. But it’s unclear whether this natural sequencing
format results from hardwired brain features or emerges early in life as the
brain develops, Samuelson notes.
She suspects that a shared attribute of still-unfolding
brains in children at least partly shapes language structure. “An important
step is to see whether young children show the same natural sequence for event
representations that adults do,” Samuelson says.
Goldin-Meadow’s team studied 20 Turkish speakers in Istanbul, 20 Mandarin Chinese speakers in Beijing,
20 English speakers in Chicago and 20 Spanish
speakers in Madrid.
Participants came from universities in each city.
In one task, half the speakers of each language described 36
brief vignettes shown on a computer screen, first in words and then using only
hand gestures. Vignettes included a girl waving to an unseen person, a duck
walking to a wheelbarrow, a woman twisting a knob and a girl giving a flower to
a man.
Verbal descriptions followed language-specific word
sequencing, the researchers report in the July 8 Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. English, Spanish
and Chinese speakers used a subject-verb-object sequence, such as saying “the
woman twists the knob.” Turkish speakers used a subject-object-verb sequence,
saying the equivalent of “the woman the knob twists.”
Most languages worldwide employ one or the other of these
ordering formats, although exceptions exist, Goldin-Meadow notes.
Yet all participants, regardless of language, produced
gestures first for an actor, then for an object and finally for an action in
portraying vignettes. After watching a woman twisting a knob, all volunteers
nonverbally communicated a sequence of events corresponding to “woman knob
twists.”
In another task, the remaining half of the speakers of each
language reconstructed the same 36 vignettes by stacking sets of three transparent
pictures one at a time onto a peg to form a single image. The final image
looked the same regardless of the order in which transparencies were stacked,
such as a woman on the left, a knob on the right and a circular-shaped arrow in
the middle denoting a twisting motion.
Speakers of all languages almost always stacked images in
the same order. Participants typically chose the drawing of a woman first,
followed by the drawing of a knob and finally the drawing of a circular arrow,
again reflecting a subject-object-verb preference.
Intriguingly, a subject-object-verb arrangement also
characterizes a sign language that arose over the past 70 years in an isolated
Bedouin community in Israel.
As a result of a genetic condition, that community has a high incidence of
deafness that develops in early childhood.
Goldin-Meadow has found deaf children elsewhere in the world
who have never heard anyone talk have developed sign languages that follow a
consistent object-verb order, though the placement of subject remains unclear.
She plans to investigate whether these deaf youngsters display a preference for
subject-object-verb sequences. She also wants to examine how these children
order transparencies to describe events that they’ve seen.
In the meantime, the University of Chicago
researcher suggests that it’s easier to think about distinct entities, as
opposed to actions. This leads people to highlight those involved in an action
before focusing on the nature of the action. Given a particularly close association
between objects and actions, action sequences are at least initially
represented as subject-object-verb, in her view.
As a language community grows and its speech becomes more
complex, the subject-object-verb format sometimes changes for still unclear
reasons, Goldin-Meadow speculates.
Found in: Humans and Psychology