London Public Library Series 2011
Mind Your Words: The Science of Human Language
When: Thursdays, April 7-28, 7 pm-9 pm
Where: Central Library, Stevenson & Hunt Meeting Room A
Cost: Free, no registration required.
Parking: Two hours validated parking in City Plaza during library hours
Presented by UWO’s Department of Psychology
Psychology: The Science of Being Human
April 7: The art and science of saying what you don't mean.
Presenter: Dr. Albert Katz
What we say often is not what we really mean. People commonly use metaphor ("my car’s a lemon"), sarcasm ("you're a great friend") and other turns of phrase. Dr. Katz will discuss why we do so, and how we discern what speakers intend to say from what they actually say.
April 14: What studying the brain tells us about speech and reading disorders in children
Presenters: Drs. Marc Joanisse and Lisa Archibald
About one child in ten develops a written or spoken language difficulty, including dyslexia and specific language impairment. Drs. Joanisse and Archibald will discuss how these disorders are diagnosed and treated and will present new research showing how affected children's brains differ from those of typically developing children.
April 21: Red tape holds up new bridge: What makes sentences easy or hard to understand?
Presenter: Dr. Ken McRae
Language is ambiguous. This sentence structure, "The horse raced past the barn fell." is identical to "The landmine buried in the sand exploded." However, the first sentence is almost impossible to understand whereas the second is easy. This talk will focus on aspects of language understanding that explain such differences.
April 28: Bilinguals: Two tongues, one mind.
Presenter: Dr. Debra Jared
Learning one language is hard enough. Yet many people learn two or more languages, often simultaneously. Dr. Jared will talk about how bilinguals manage two languages without getting them mixed up, why a second language is hard for adults to learn, and the benefits of bilingualism for general cognitive functioning.











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