Automaticity is performing skill without conscious control
Increasingly
efficient process
Nota:
Progression from "controlled" processes to "automatic" ones
Research
continues to
support
Nota:
e.g. recent Degner, et al. study of affective connotations
Humans have
limited capacity for
complex skills
Nota:
Processing sub-components involved in a skill requires more attention resources.
Sociocultural Theory
Theorists
Lev Vygotsky
James P. Lantolf
Description
Sociocultural
Nota:
According to Vygotsky and later theorists, the idea that human minds function according to participation and accommodation of cultural and mediation integrated into social activities
Internalization
Nota:
The process whereby language and other social artifacts become part of a person's mental and psychological processes
Regulation (self, other, or object regulation)
Nota:
Stages of focus where words focus on certain aspects or areas of an individual's environment to shape biological realities into cultural concepts
Zone of Proximal Development
Nota:
Difference between what someone can do alone and what someone can do with mediation
Mediation
Nota:
A psychological theory that argues that humans use higher-level cultural tools such as language, literacy, and logic in a conscious effort to control the biologically-endowed mental processes of the brain
Imitation
Nota:
Cognitive activity with the goal of forming conscious psychological development
Competition Model
Theorists
Elizabeth Bates
Brian MacWhinney
Description
Language acquisition
Sentence Processing
Nota:
Individuals use linguistic cues to get meaning from language, rather than relying on linguistic universals.
Interpretation and communication
Nota:
When aquiring an L2, learners sometimes receive competing cues and must decide with cue(s) is more relevant for determine meaning.