Author: Brigitte

  • Why English Isn’t the Super Absorber

    Why English Isn’t the Super Absorber

    I was going to save this entry for a bit down the line, but the idea is there- so hey why not? It is strange though, to both oscillate and vacillate between ideas, and having ideas, or having an abundance of different ideas that contradict one another, and then having none at all and suddenly feeling completely uninspired. That’s a long, poorly structured sentence and I hope you had a lot of trouble reading it. I was terrible for long sentences in high-school and an awful speller, but I was good at English. Not great, good. Megan Johnstone was great, where ever she is now, with her radiant fire-red hair. I remember her eyelashes being almost translucent, which always seemed so exotic to me. But she was excellent at English, how could I forget with Mrs. Young continually singing out her praises? With Mrs. Young (the English teacher whom taught the hard English and was a hard marker) we did – what it’s called- with Piggy, the conch, “got the fruits” and the children that go feral? Oh that’s right, Lord of the Flies. I remember her saying Golding wrote it in response to The Coral Island where the children are basically Christian angels (or something) and live in an unrealistic harmony. Golding had issues though, I wish they taught us that in high-school.

    More recently a story resurfaced of six Tongan children who did get stranded in on an island, the 2020 Guardian headline read: “The real Lord of the Flies: what happened when six boys were shipwrecked for 15 months” (https://www.theguardian.com/books/2020/may/09/the-real-lord-of-the-flies-what-happened-when-six-boys-were-shipwrecked-for-15-months). The Tongan boys were discovered by Australian sailor Peter Warner in 1966, a good decade or so after the first publication of Lord of the Flies in 1954. The key take away from this was that the boys didn’t take their isolation from civilisation/community as the opportunity to descend into depravity -or as Golding would have you believe- show the true nature of humanity.

    The Tongan boys worked together as a team and it was their ability to cooperate that allowed them to survive (read the Guardian article for details). Look if you haven’t read Lord of the Flies, this whole blog has inadvertently turned into a spoiler so- suck it up – or stop reading. Okay, so, in Golding’s universe kids love violence and love to kill (kinda). I remember being disturbed by the murder of Piggy and even how Mrs. Young’s dulcet voice carried across the classroom as she described the movement of the ocean after Piggy falls to his death:


    Then the sea breathed again in a long, slow sigh, the water boiled white and
    pink over the rock; and when it went, sucking back again, the body of Piggy
    was gone
    .

    Golding had negatively shaped my teenage understanding of human nature, a sentiment echoed by the author of the Guardian article, Rutger Bregman. I planned to move on from talking about Golding and wax lyrical about some of other things we covered in English like:

    Hamlet – The procrastinator.
    Animal Farm – “Two legs bad, four legs good” and “all animals are equal, but some animals are more equal than others”. /Maybe communism isn’t that bad?
    The Piano – We studied movies too, great soundtrack by Michael Nyman- I learnt the first four bars of The Heart Asks Pleasure First.
    The Lord of the Rings – Smallest person can make a difference.
    The Great Gatsby – Before the DiCaprio film, a vague memory of Mrs. Young saying the colour yellow meant corruption.

    And I was also going to make commentary about what gets accepted in curriculum, the politics, the cultural impacts and how formative high-school literature ended up being. But here we are stuck talking about Lord of the Flies, still. Actually this blog was going to be based on a Reddit thread about how English is not a super absorber like I claimed in my first entry (I’ll get back to that another time). Because when I re-read (skimmed) Bregman’s article two things had changed since I first encountered it: 1) I now have a little bit of knowledge of the history of psychology and 2) there are open acts of genocide currently being committed.

    Bregman takes a more optimistic look at what it means to be human, which in 2020 perhaps was an optimism I was willing to share. He accounts some of the bleakness of Lord of the Flies coming out from the horrors of the Second World War and the inescapable question of that generation (to quote Bregman):

    Had Auschwitz been an anomaly, they wanted to know, or is there a Nazi hiding in each of us?

    So we are kinda coming full circle with this, because how psychology is practiced today is based around this very same existential conundrum. The Boulder Conference, 1949 (taking place in Boulder, Colorado) was in reaction to the despondent soldiers returning from war (we now call this PTSD) and the once unimaginable horrors of Nazi Germany. How do we explain the cold-hearted precision, the blind obedience and the complete and perfect destruction of the understanding (or fallacy, conjecture really) that to be moral, is to be human?

    Maybe the most important thing you need to know is that the Boulder Conference was the initiation of the Scientist-Practitioner model. This model operates under the central paradigm that the psychologist is both the scientist and the practitioner. The science part is mostly to do with stats, and funny little experiments.

    A note on statistics:

    As a prospective student I often heard things like “the statistics will get you” or “they weed them (vulnerable first years) out with stats”. Don’t get me wrong, I like stats, I even enjoyed coding in R. Heck, I think they should teach us more of the complex mathematical equations behind the statistics. Because it kind of feels like you’re baking a cake without recipe when you do stats in psych. But maybe we’ll get back to stats and the issues with psychologists using stats poorly (p-hacking, etc) and the subsequent replication crisis another time. God I wish I didn’t give up on studying math post high-school.

    A note on the empirical method:

    As a first year psych student you start off by learning the empirical method, the history of sciences and science theory. And this continues throughout your undergrad (at least this is true for The University of Adelaide). Maybe you’re interested to know the foundations of this methodology, maybe you’re not? It doesn’t matter much for now but I’ll list them below anyway:

    Principles of the scientific method
    1. Empiricism
    2. Experimentation
    3. Mathematisation
    4. Mechanical philosophy
    5. Institutionalisation

    But does being a good scientist make you a good psychologist? There is issue with the Scientist-Practitioner model, the empirical method, its epistemology and its endeavor to find “universal truths”. One obvious reason being that, much like how semantics is situated firmly within cultural context, so is psychology.

    My notes from the level III course Psychology, Science and Society (I think this is verbatim Dr. Peta Callaghan’s lecture on the archival turn of social psychology in the 1950/60s):

    ….Mainstream psychologists assumed that they could conduct experiments and provide universal insights into human behaviour. But in reality they were revealing very specific insights into north American culture.

    Note: I guess I am predominately talking about this historical mainstream psychology. Psychology does have different approaches and methodologies. It has more recently been capable of soul searching, deep reflection (reflexivity) and cultural sensitivity. However from what I can observe much of the archaic ideology, like psychologist being a “godlike” observer conducting “impeccable” scientific experiments, is still deeply rooted in its practice. This is my experience from a student’s perspective, I am going to take a reflexive moment here and acknowledge that, perhaps this view is consequence of my education and the act of learning the history and theory of something without the practice of it (I don’t even see a psychologist!). How can my impression not be skewed? With this caveat in mind, lets move forward and onwards to talk about what we have to talk about the Milgram experiments.

    Milgram’s obedience studies (1963, 1965, 1974), it is important to note, occurred at a time when adopting ethics into psychological research was a very loose practice. This is somewhat of a golden-era of research where you could do psychologically damaging experiments to try and uncover the truth about human nature (jokes)- see, Robbers Cave and the Standford Prison experiment. You have probably heard about these studies, they’re pretty famous and will undoubtedly remain so, as this is research that can never again be repeated (ethic codes have improved substantially). Milgram’s experiments were conducted in the aftermath of WII, the Nuremberg trails, and the defense that “I was just doing what my superior ordered me to do”.

    A very quick summary of the obedience studies:

    1. Naive participant ( the Teacher) was recruited to administer electric shocks to who they believed to be another naive participant.

    2. The participant receiving the shocks (the Learner) was actually a confederate, pretending to be hurt (no actual electric shocks were administered).

    3. The Teacher delivers shocks increasing by 15 volts every time the Learner produces an incorrect response (with voice recorded cries of pain and pleas to stop).

    4. Researcher gives a series of scripted demands (standardised prods) to encourage the electrocution of the confederate, such as “the experiment requires you to continue” and “you have no other choice you must go on”.

    Results
    Milgram found that 66% of participants “obediently” administered the maximum and potentially fatal shocks of 450 volts.

    From this he came up with the rudimentary theory about ‘Agentic State’, whereby there is an internal shift in the individual and the “person entering authority system no longer sees himself acting out of his own purpose but rather comes to see himself as an agent for executing the wishes of another person” (Milgram, 1974).

    Issues
    Why is this theory rudimentary? Well firstly, it kinda ignores the social, cultural and political influences of the time, e.g like brainwashing and propaganda. It also seems like a cop out. More pertinently there are issues with the experiments. Although we can’t repeat this research, what we are able to do is a retrospective discourse analysis. Okay, I wish I hadn’t gone over my notes because now I am basically reconstructing the course material here. But it is fascinating. Simply, what discourse analysis (see Michael Foucault) allows us to do is go over the archival data (transcripts of the experiments) and examine how in reality the Teachers were continually objecting to the commands of the researcher. From my notes:

    – The discourse analysis countered the standard story of obedience to authority. 

    -Original research neglected to pay attention to language and social interaction in this experiment and psychology as whole (and the relationship between researcher and participant).  

    -Highlights the important role of qualitative methods, reevaluates previously taken-for-granted assumptions about  how research should be done and the kinds of conclusions that can be drawn from research findings.

    Also I think I remember that participants were paid, and potentially homeless and mostly male? But I have to double-check that. Let’s get back to why we started talking about this. Does this research help us understand what it means to be human? More theoretical explanations for this behaviour is Nissani ‘s (1990) theory stating human’s have limited cognitive capabilities, i.e. cannot tell good from bad (people are dumb) and Russel (1990) banging on about autonomous denial, which surely must relate in some way to cognitive dissonance. What do I think? In truth I don’t know what to think anymore. Maybe people are just dumb. Or maybe we can’t ignore the context in which a phenomena occurs. Or maybe like the bystander effect, or a crowd mentality– people love to diffuse responsibility at any chance they get. Maybe Golding is bloody right. However, none of these answers make any of it justifiable.

    What I can say is the idea of the superiority of quantitative research permeates much of psychological theories, and the value of qualitative methodologies is gaining traction.


    PS. I actually should talk about Robbers Cave because that is pretty much the Lord of the Flies in action.


    PPS. I am not going to re-name the blog

  • Psycho-linguistics, cognition and idioms (show me the money)

    Psycho-linguistics, cognition and idioms (show me the money)

    Okay, so I lied about this being a blog primarily about linguistics. In truth, I have no real plan of where I am going with it exactly (this is also true for my life). But I do have some ideas. I grudgingly ended up paying $70 to upgrade Word Press because the free version wouldn’t allow me to change from the default font, a font that could possibly (absolutely) generate the same cult-hatred which exists for Comic Sans. For the record I’ve never been overly adverse to Comic Sans. Every time I come across it, I get some warm and fuzzy nostalgia about Microsoft 95, floppy disks, slide transitions and the unhelpful paperclip. However, my point being, having forked out some hard, cold cash I guess I have one more year of blog entries.

    Now that I have started talking about semantics, every word/metaphor/idiom I use feels like my own little personal joke. Like the idiom- cold, hard cash– what makes cash cold and hard? Why does the order always have to be cold, hard cash and not hard, cold cash. Granted word order in idioms is almost always crucial. Cold and hard do have tangible associations with money, coins can be both hard and cold. Maybe so can credit cards? A hard wad of notes? I guess it would hurt if someone threw a soprano-like stack of cash in your face.

    Historically it looks like it has something to do with merchants in the 1600s (PRI), where the phrase can be traced to the desire for hard cash or hard money in exchange for goods (and maybe instead of exchanging your first-born daughter for some livestock and 3 acres, you wanted some cold, hard cash). But did merchants really use the word cash? I don’t know about this one internet article I sourced: https://www.mentalfloss.com/posts/why-we-say-cold-hard-cash. You should read it actually- it goes on to talk about the psychological effects of handling physical money!

    Okay, so the word cash was circulating around the 16th century. Something to do with Middle French and their caisse ‘box’, which came from the Old Italian cassa ‘money box’, originating from what you might say is a godfather of languages, the Latin word capsa meaning ‘box’. You had a big box to keep your money in because internet banking didn’t come into conception till the golden era of the early 2000s, duh.

    Cold, hard cash doesn’t only represent some of the physical aspects of money, but is also associated with a sense of immediacy. You want the money right now and you’re not waiting for a check to clear. Maybe it’s hard to conceptualise a time when money wasn’t just an instant wave of the phone to a tiny little square! (I wonder how the Square stocks are doing.) What Mental Floss (the linked article above) suggests is that there is a psychological link between the cold physical feature of money and a kind of bystander effect. Except instead of responsibility to help a stranger being diffused by a crowd- the cold hard money in your hand translates to a cold dead heart. Maybe that was a bit dramatic. Surprisingly, this study was very easy to find as Mental Floss referenced it in another related article. Luckily with my increasing HECS debt and unrelenting studies I have free access to the article! So let me summarise some research.

    Reutner et al. (2015) postulates that money is linked to social coldness. This is a different study (also cited by Mental Floss) centred on the conjecture that “the metaphor of social coldness is bodily grounded and thus linked to actual sensations of physical coldness”. Their hypothesis? Based on the evidence that the metaphor of money is related social coldness, this figurative coldness will mean individuals will feel physically cold . It ties to theories around embodiment which, simply put, posits that our sensorimotor experiences are integrated with and influence our psychological processes.

    They conducted an experiment where participants had to guess the room
    temperature after putting their hand in a jar of money. It used a
    between-group design, with participants randomly assigned to either the
    control or experimental group. The control group had their hand in a jar
    containing 97 paper pieces resembling banknotes, while the experimental
    group
    had a jar filled with actual money (97 banknotes or $1300). In both groups, participants guessed the amount in the jar, other measurements around the room, and the room’s temperature, the dependent variable.

    There were 40 participants in this experiment (32 female, 8 men). They completed the task for course credit. Receiving course credit, coupled with the skew in gender, undoubtedly means that they were psychology students. After all it is the humble psychology student who has inadvertently become the most studied demographic in the field (but I’ll talk about that another time). Look, this really isn’t a huge sample size and the fact that there is such an uneven distribution in gender is problematic. But adequately powering a study (that is, recruiting lots of people to do your stupid experiment) is usually constrained by resources i.e. time and money. So be skeptical of research, especially psychology research, which is currently in a replication crisis. However, this doesn’t mean it should be completely discounted.

    What did the study find? That participants in the experimental condition (jar of money) had significantly lower estimates of room temperature. Importantly this effect was only evident for temperature and not the other estimates- which is interesting! It might be diligent to note that the researchers attempt to control for other unwanted variables, like individual core temperatures, by measuring body temperatures at the start of the experiment. However it’s unclear 1) if there were any significant differences in body temperature, 2) what they did to mitigate any potential differences and 3) how individual body temperature might influence estimates.

    They did do another experiment in this study but if I have to write anything more about it, I’ll never finish this stupid blog. I also want to add I was not intending to include any of this research, but here we are, and now I feel like I’m writing a lit review (BORING). The show must go on.

    So let’s talk about the other study (Guéguen & Jacob, 2013), the one were people aren’t helpful to strangers after they withdraw a stack of cash from the ATM. This is the key take from the research and nicely summarised in the title of the paper: Behavioral consequences of money: When the automated teller machine reduces helping behavior. It’s one of those exciting psychology field experiments done in a naturalistic setting and not inside the lab. 150 participants (random pedestrians, even distribution of gender) were selected, half of which used a nearby ATM (experimental condition) and half walked by the ATM (control condition). Two experiments were conducted, with 100 participants assigned to one and 50 to the other. Experiment 1) they were asked by a female confederate to complete a short survey and in experiment 2) the confederate ‘unknowingly’ drops a bus pass near the participant. The dependent variable being the number of times help was offered to the confederate.

    Results: Experiment 1) 17/50 (34%) in the experimental condition offered help, compared to the control condition 31/50 (62%). For experiment 2) 15/25 (60%) in the experimental condition offered help, compared to 24/25 (94%) offering help in the control condition.

    Problems with the study: 1) Authors state when approaching participants to be involved “precautions were taken to solicit participants in both conditions with the same apparent characteristics: age, gender, style of dress, race, etc.” Firstly, how do they define style of dress? This seems like a very subjective inclusion criteria. Do they mean class? Secondly, all psychological research must be done according to some ethical guidelines. This would be procuring permission from the participant to use their data and some form debrief after the experiment. However, ethical considerations and participant permission isn’t mentioned once in the article. So let’s speculate, perhaps they actually completed this task using 200 participants and post-experiment (in the debrief) gathered people’s demographics and matched their characteristics (“age and etc”) accordingly. Perhaps they disregarded participants that couldn’t be matched, because how you would be sure of someone’s age and race by looking at them? You would also want to know why they chose to omit these certain data points. This is entirely hypothetical because I cannot see how the data can be unbiased if you’re picking candidates solely on how they look. Also, generally, research strives for randomly selected population samples? It seems the Guéguen and Jacob were trying to control for age and socio-economic variables but introduced a wealth of other potential biases. Without disclosure of their full methodology it’s impossible to know. Thirdly, yes there is more, as highlighted in the paper using the same female confederate for the experiments has some issues. What differences would be introduced if the confederate was male presenting? Did the confederate (even though she did not know the goal of the study) unconsciously act differently in each experiment?

    So there is some research! Thank god that’s over (it was exhausting) and I can start talking about words, banks and money again. Wait have I started talking about banks yet? Before I get back to it, can you see how research can be unintentionally misleading? It would be nice to move away from broad, sweeping generalisations because they don’t really exist. This isn’t to say I don’t believe there is a correlation between handling money and temporarily turning into a sociopath- I absolutely do!

    Things I was going to talk about before I got distracted:

    a) Why are idioms important when trying to understand categorisation and meaning in both linguistics and cognitive psychology.
    b) Paper money and inflation.
    c) Coming full circle to talk about why fractional reserve banking is bad, which I made a little joke about in my first blog.
    d) Other more abstract idioms like, when pigs fly, which is apparently an adynaton.
    e) Gold Standard, how this idiom originated from gold standard banking (when money was valued in reference to gold).
    f) Metaphor of time is money.
    g) Concepts and categories: Necessary and sufficient features.
    h) Forked out: A history of the phrasal verb.
    K) What was banking like in the 16th century though?


    Future topics (possibly):

    Why do people hate Comic Sans ?
    Bad at English, how many colons (:) is too many?
    Embodiment theory.

    References

    Guéguen, N., & Jacob, C. (2013). Behavioral consequences of money: When the automated teller machine reduces helping behavior. The Journal of Socio-Economics, 47, 103–104. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.socec.2013.09.004

    Reutner, L., Hansen, J., & Greifeneder, R. (2015). The Cold Heart. Social Psychological and Personality Science, 6(5), 490–495. https://doi.org/10.1177/1948550615574005

  • English is the “Super Absorber”

    English is the “Super Absorber”


    Where do I start? Do I start with expressing my general or, arguably, directed frustration (at my parents) that I only speak one language? Not only does my mother speak both German and English, but my father also speaks Arabic, French and English. I, on the other hand, have only mastered the language of the global economy, the language of colonizers, the capitalists and those terrible Americans.

    At least I speak the Queen’s English, well not really. I’m from Adelaide, Australia so I speak English with a posh Australian accent (I say dance /da:ns/, not dance /dæns/). An accent that I intentionally colloquialised to fit in better with my more occa sounding friends. You see, Adelaidians are known for speaking a clearer more formal English. Claimed to be an outcome of not being settled by convicts like the majority of the country. I am assuming the only other exception is Canberra. I should probably do an expeditious Google or brush up on my Australian history. You are going to learn very quickly* I am not the omniscient author/protagonist of these blogs, rather, a very fallible and very real person. I advise you to do your own research and don’t believe everything you read on the internet.

    Okay, so apparently South Australia is “officially” the only state which was not settled by convicts, a fact I surely knew in primary school. Do you ever wonder what happened to general knowledge? In my schooling years I remember being tested on things like: What’s the population of Australia? What’s the most densely populated country in the world? What are all the continents? What’s a monotreme? Why is fractional reserve banking bad? Why don’t we tax billionaires? You know just the general stuff. Do we just bundle it into everything no longer necessary in the Smart Phone Age?

    Alas, I do not have all the advantages in cognition, i.e better memory, attention and problem solving, not to mention the cultural insights and diversity (also, better job opportunities and life satisfaction according to ChatGPT) that the bi, tri and multilinguals have. I also believe that my life would just be generally (true use of the word in this case) better if I was fluent in more than one language. The sun would be brighter, the grass greener, my self-expression and confidence more developed… maybe I would own a house, have conquered Everest and gotten a Nobel prize (the latter two seemingly more achievable than the first, currently).

    But no, I am insufferably monolingual. What makes this so insufferable? Let’s quote language philosopher Ludwig Wittgenstein:

    The limits of my language mean the limits of my world.

    I actually stumbled across this philosopher when I was looking for a bleaker, more macabre (very in vogue word) quote about being the prisoner of your first language. Something I heard in Linguistics, 101 (way back in 2007, pre-Instagram) with Dr. Peter Mühlhäusler. Dr. Mühlhäusler was an excellent professor who specialised in pidgin languages that developed on oil rigs in the Pacific. He would go on the most delightful tangents. It was he who boldly claimed that maternal instinct was a social construct and not a biological imperative in one of our first lectures! This was a time when the lecture theatre was almost always full and you would pay for and collect physical copies of your text book. I’m never going to forget his lecture on onomatopoeia, where he drew a little fish and a fat* fish and asked:

    Food for thought
    Perhaps alongside BCE and CE, we’ll have PRI, pre Instagram and POI post Instagram.

    Did you Google it? Is Google a synonym for search? After all it is a verb now, according to the Merriam-Webster online dictionary: Google verb- to use the Google search engine to obtain information about (someone or something) on the World Wide Web. But its not a synonym for search. Warning, dictionary definitions are useful and useless.

    Also consider the analogy between food, language and thought, highlighted in the article I linked. These things become important when we look at mental representations and how we categorise things.

    I’ll find some good published articles too with my current unlimited access to all those pesky “scientific” journals with paywalls.

    ***


    You are going to learn very quickly I am not the omniscient author/protagonist of these blogs, rather a very fallible and very real person.

    * Very quickly, using a modifier can be indicative of poor language. Better words include: promptly, immediately, swiftly, rapidly and expeditiously. Do you agree? If I had said “you are going to quickly learn”, perhaps I don’t need a modifier at all, simple change in word order. So, it is my sentence structure that is poor! As, “you are going to learn swiftly I am not the omniscient author/protagonist of these blogs, rather a very fallible and very real person” has all the same issues as you are going to learn quickly I am not the omniscient author/protagonist of these blogs and rather a very fallible, very real person” in the above sentence. I argue it’s the “very” that makes it sound better. Q: Why not restructure the sentence? A: I don’t want to. B: It goes with the rest of the sentence.

    Little fish and a fat fish – graded antonyms(?)

    *Fat and little you could argue are not complete antonyms. A better pairing would be little and big, or skinny and fat. But in various contexts they can represent the opposites of each other. You could say is that fat, little, big and skinny all belong in the same lexical field. I’ll add lexical fields to the future topics section.

    * Absorbative, not sure if this is a word or not, but I like it better than absorptive.


    Future topics (potentially):
    Why English isn’t special in absorbing words.
    Word meaning is tricky, slippery and ill-defined, linguists still argue all the time.
    Semantics.
    Dictionary definitions are useful and useless.
    Mental representations and cognition.
    Word order studies in psychology.
    Language- I love using brackets!
    The dictionary, the thesaurus, the internet, AI and language.
    What is grammar? Why do we need it?
    Why do we tend to believe what we read? Evolutionary advantages of story telling.
    Bad at English.
    Linguistics 101 – the linguistics department at The University of Adelaide.
    Language is always evolving and changing.
    Philosophy and language.
    Consciousness and language.
    Polyglots.
    Total recall.
    Origins of words and semantic shifts.
    Meaning Mapping.
    Lexical fields.
    Semantic shifts.
    I’ll tell you about how technology has impacted our working memories and ability recall things like phone numbers.