Psycholinguistics
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Author: A mention made? Or a full-on discussion of language and psychology? I’ve often wondered myself what someone does behind a door marked “Psycholinguist.”
Editor: Don’t they carry out experiments to find out the role language plays in how brains remember memories, organize thoughts and retrieve information?
Author: Black box theory. Words go in, stuff happens inside the black box, words come out.
Editor: What else do they do?
Author: Language and identity, language acquisition…. People who study those areas might come up to you and say, “Hi, I’m Brian, I’m a psycholinguist.”
Editor: Doesn’t sound as though the field occupies as much territory as sociolinguistics.
Author: Technicians who probe the innards of black boxes often seem to have fewer academic colonialist ambitions.
Editor: How about those chaps who study handwriting and language use to identify crims
Author: Forensic linguists? Oh, they’re a whole other tribe. They're colonialists. They want to take over the law.
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Labels: black box theory, psycholinguistics
1 Comments:
To those cave-dwellers who unaccountably think there is anything colonial in the agendas of hardworking forensic linguists may I humbly refer you to the recent work of Herr Prof Dr Hannes Kniffka (Working in Language and Law: A German Perspective), which is "a detailed account of the work MASTERMINDED by the author in the last 35 years, providing DOMINANT insights into the EVER-EXPANDING field of expert testimony.Further, it outlines future SCHEMES to RATIONALISE the whole world of linguistics until a SINGLE HEGEMONIC STANDARD has finally been achieved for the GOOD OF ALL.
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