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THE
CIVILIZING OF GENIE MAYA PINES |
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(from Teaching
English through the Disciplines: Psychology, Loretta F. Kasper, Ed.,
Whittier, 1997) |
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In
1970, a wild child was found in California. Genie, now 24, has stirred up
new questions about language and intelligence.” Only
a few cases are recorded of human beings who have grown up without any
real contact with other humans. So rare is the phenomenon that when a
12-year-old “wild boy” was found in the forest of Aveyron in
18th-century France, the government ordered him brought to Paris to be
examined by doctors in an institution for deaf-mutes. There he came under
the care of the physician Jean Itard, who also acted as the boy’s tutor.
Itard left detailed records of his experience, which was later dramatized
in the 1970 movie The Wild Child. Although the boy was not deaf, and
despite Itard’s work, the child never learned to speak. In
1970, a wild child was found in California: a girl of 13 who had been
isolated in a small room and had not been spoken to by her parents since
infancy. “Genie,” as she was later dubbed to protect her privacy by
the psycholinguists who tested her, could not stand erect. At the time,
she was unable to speak: she could only whimper. The
case came to light when Genie’s 50-year-old mother ran away from her
70-year-old husband after a violent quarrel and took the child along. The
mother was partially blind and applied for public assistance. The social
worker in the welfare office took one look at Genie and called her
supervisor, who called the police. Genie was sent to the Los Angeles
Children’s Hospital for tests. Charges of willful abuse were filed
against both her parents, according to the Los Angeles Times. On the day
he was due to appear in court, however, Genie’s father shot himself to
death. He left a note in which he wrote. “The world will never
understand.” The
discovery of Genie aroused intense curiosity among psychologists,
linguists, neurologists, and others who study brain development. They
were eager to know what Genie’s mental level was at the time she was
found and whether she would be capable of developing her faculties.
“It’s a terribly important case,” says Harlan Lane, a psycholinguist
at Northeastern University who wrote The Wild Boy ofAveyron. “Since our
morality doesn’t allow us to conduct deprivation experiments with
human beings, these unfortunate people are all we have to go on.” Genie
was 24 years old when this article was written in 1981. Through years of
rehabilitation and special training, she has been observed and repeatedly
tested. Hundreds of videotapes record her progress. She has been the
subject of several journal articles and a book. Since the book was
published in 1977, additional studies have brought into focus some of the
issues raised by Genie’s case. Far from settling any scientific
controversies, she has provided fresh ammunition for arguments on both
sides of a major issue: is there a “critical period” in a child’s
development during which, if language acquisition is not stimulated or
encouraged, it may be impaired later on or not emerge at all? She has
inspired a California researcher who worked with her, Susan Curtiss, to
develop a controversial hypothesis about how language learning affects the
two hemispheres of the brain. Genie has also stirred up debate about the
relationship between language and other mental abilities. As a result, new
research is now in progress on the surprising language ability of some
mentally retarded children. As
described in Curtiss’s book, Genie: A Psycholinguistic Study of a
Modern-Day “Wild Child” (Academic Press), Genie is living proof of
human resilience. It is surprising that she survived at all. Her father
apparently hated children and tried to strangle Genie’s mother while she
was pregnant with her first child. According to Curtiss’s book, when an
earlier baby girl was born, he put the child in the garage because he
couldn’t stand her crying: the baby died of pneumonia at two-and-a half
months. A second child, a boy, died two days after birth, allegedly from
choking on his own mucus. A third child was rescued and cared for by his
grandmother when he was three years old and is still alive. Genie, the
fourth child, was denied such help, however, because shortly after she was
born, her grandmother was hit by a truck and killed. From
the age of 20 months, when her family moved into her grandmother’s
house, until she was 13 and a half, Genie lived in nearly total isolation.
Curtiss’ book and newspaper reports describe Genie’s life at the
time: naked and restrained by a harness that her father had fashioned, she
was left to sit on her potty seat day after day. She could move only her
hands and feet. She had nothing to do. At night, when she was not
forgotten, she was put into a sort of straitjacket and caged in a crib
that had wire-mesh sides and an overhead cover. She was often hungry. If
she made any noise, her father beat her. “He never spoke to her,”
wrote Curtiss. “He made barking sounds and he growled at her.... Her
mother was terrified of him—and besides, she was too blind to take much
care of Genie. The task fell largely on Genie’s brother, who, following
his father’s instructions, did not speak to Genie either. He fed her
hurriedly and in silence, mostly milk and baby foods. There was little for
Genie to listen to. Her mother and brother spoke in low voices for fear of
her father. When
Genie arrived in Children’s Hospital in November 1970, she was a
pitiful, malformed, incontinent, unsocialized, and severely malnourished
creature. Although she was beginning to show signs of pubescence, she
weighed only 59 pounds. She could not straighten her arms or legs. She did
not know how to chew. She salivated a great deal and spent much of her
time spitting. And she was eerily silent. Various
physicians, psychologists, and therapists were brought in to examine her
during those first months. Shortly after Genie was admitted as a patient,
she was given the Vineland Social Maturity Scale and the Preschool
Attainment Record, on which she scored as low as normal one-year-olds. At
first, she seemed to recognize only her own name and the word sorry. After
a while, she began to say two phrases that she used as if they were single
words, in a ritualized way: stopit
and nomore. Psychologists
at the hospital did not really know how much she understood. Nor did they
know how to evaluate whatever language she had: to what degree did it
deviate from the standard pattern? They eventually asked Victoria A.
Fromkin, a UCLA psycholinguist, to study Genie’s language abilities.
Fromkin brought along a graduate student, Susan Curtiss (now an assistant
professor of linguistics at UCLA), who became so fascinated by Genie that
she devoted much of the next seven years of her life to researching the
girl’s linguistic development. Working
with Genie was not an easy task. Although she had learned to walk with a
jerky motion and became more or less toilet trained during her first seven
months at Children’s Hospital, Genie still had many disconcerting
habits. She salivated and spat constantly, so much so that her body and
clothing were filled with spit and “reeked of a foul odor,” as Curtiss
recounts. When excited or agitated, she urinated, leaving her companion to
deal with the results. And she masturbated excessively. Nevertheless,
Genie was decidedly human, and her delight at discovering the world—as
well as her obvious progress—made the struggle worthwhile. When Curtiss
started working with Genie, she began by simply spending time with her or
taking her to visit places, in order to establish a relationship. She took
Genie to the supermarket, where Genie walked around the store and examined
the meats and the plastic containers with some curiosity. Every house
seemed exciting to Genie, who had spent so much of her life cooped up in
one room: on walks she would often go up to the front doors of houses,
hoping that someone would open the door and let her in. During
her first seven months of freedom, Genie had learned to recognize many new
words—probably hundreds by the time Curtiss started investigating her
knowledge of language systematically in June 1971. And she had begun to
speak. On a visit with Curtiss to the home of one of the therapists, Genie
eagerly explored every room, then picked up a decorator pillow: when asked
what it was, she replied “pillow.” Asked if she wanted to see the
family cat, Genie replied, “No. No. Cat,” and shook her head
vehemently. Most of the time, however, she said nothing. At
first Genie spoke only in one-word utterances, as toddlers do when they
start to talk. Then in July of 1971, she began to string two words
together on her own, not just while imitating what somebody else had said.
She said “big teeth,” “little marble,” “two hand.” A little
later she produced some verbs: “Curtiss come,” “Want milk.” In
November of the same year she progressed to occasional three-word strings:
“small two cup,” “white clear box.” Unlike
normal children, however, Genie never asked questions, despite many
efforts to train her to do so. Nor did she understand much grammar. And
her speech development was abnormally slow. A few weeks after normal
children reach the two-word stage, their speech generally develops so
rapidly and explosively that it is difficult to keep track of or describe.
No such explosion occurred for Genie. Four years after she began to put
words together, her speech remained, for the most part, like a somewhat
garbled telegram. While
Genie did not speak in a fully developed, normal way, she acquired some
language after she was discovered. That contradicted one aspect of the
theory that says language can be learned only during a critical period
between two years of age and puberty. According to Eric Lenneberg, a
Harvard psychologist who put forth the theory in 1967, the brain of a
child before the age of two is not sufficiently mature for the acquisition
of language, while after puberty, when the brain’s organization is
complete, it has lost its flexibility and can no longer acquire a first
language. Genie proved him wrong in one sense. Fromkin says, since the
child “showed that a certain amount of language can be learned after the
critical period.” On
the other hand, Genie failed to learn the kind of grammatical principles
that, according to Noam Chomsky, distinguish the language of human beings
from that of animals. For example, she could not grasp the difference
between various pronouns, or between active and passive verbs. In that
sense, she appeared to suffer from having passed the critical period. Her
language deficiencies could not be attributed to a lack of teachers.
Though at first it did not seem possible that she could ever attend any
school, within a few months of her arrival at Children’s Hospital she
began going to nursery classes for normal children. She soon transferred
to a special elementary school for handicapped children. Next, she spent
several years in a city high school for the mentally retarded. Outside
school, a speech therapist worked with her consistently for many years.
Meanwhile, one of the therapists and his wife took Genie into their own
home to live with their two teenage sons, a teenage daughter, a dog, and a
cat. They tried to teach Genie to trace with her fingers the shape of
sandpaper letters, to recognize words or work with Play-Doh, as well as
deal with the demands of family life. She apparently had no trouble
writing her name, and drew a number of pictures based on experiences she
had had. Nor
did Genie’s deficiencies appear to be inborn. Although many details of
her early history are unclear, and Genie’s mother has given
contradictory accounts of them. Genie seems to have been a normal baby.
She suffered from an Rh blood incompatibility, but received an exchange
transfusion one day after birth. During her first year of life, before she
was isolated from the rest of her family, she may have been on the road to
language, since her mother reported that she heard Genie saying words
right after she was locked up. The
gift of language has always been viewed as distinctively human, or even as
proof of the existence of the soul. In the early 19th century. Itard tried
desperately to teach Victor, the wild boy of Aveyron, to speak. He began
when Victor was about 12 years old—around the time of puberty, as with
Genie. However. Victor never spoke more than a few single words, perhaps
because of an injury to his throat, where he had a scar. Chomsky
believes that human beings are born with a unique competence for language,
built into their brains. But he adds that the innate mechanisms that
underlie this competence must be activated by exposure to language at the
proper time, which Chomsky speculates must occur before puberty. Among
human beings, four-week-old babies can recognize the difference between
some 40 consonants that are used in human languages, as shown by how their
sucking and heartbeats change when different consonant sounds are
presented by audiotape. That ability seems to be innate, since babies
respond to many more consonants that are used in their parents’
language—English, for example, has only 24 consonant sounds, yet babies
of English-speaking parents react to the consonants present in Japanese.
Babies lose that ability as they grow up. By the age of six, when children
enter school, their ability to hear the difference between sounds to which
they have not been exposed in their own language is severely reduced.
Feature detectors responsible for recognizing about a dozen consonant
sounds have so far been inferred to exist in the human brain. They need to
be triggered by the environment, however: if not, they appear to atrophy. Had
something similar happened to Genie’s brain? Curtiss raised that
possibility when she reported that Genie, unlike 99 percent of righthanded
people, seemed to use the right hemisphere of her brain for language.
Since the left hemisphere is predisposed for language in righthanded
people, that could account for some of the strange features of Genie’s
language development. On
tests of “dichotic listening,” for example, which involve presenting
different sounds to both ears simultaneously and asking the subject to
react to them, “Genie’s left ear outperformed her right ear on every
occasion,” Curtiss reports in her book. (Sound from the left ear is
linked to the right hemisphere: from the right ear, to the left
hemisphere.) Furthermore, “the degree of ear advantage is abnormal: Genie’s
left ear performed at 100 percent accuracy, while the right ear performed
at a level below chance.” That indicated Genie was using her right
hemisphere as consistently as do people in whom, because of damage or
surgery, only the right hemisphere is functioning. When
Genie’s brain-wave patterns were examined at the UCLA Brain Research
Institute—first as she listened to different sentences, then as she
looked at pictures of faces—the data suggested that Genie used her right
hemisphere for both language and nonlanguage functions. Genie also proved
to be particularly good at tasks involving the right hemisphere, such as
recognizing faces. On the Mooney Faces Test, which requires the subject to
distinguish real from “false” faces in which features are misplaced
and to point out several features on each face, Genie’s performance was
“the highest reported in the literature for either child or adult,”
according to Curtiss. From
the very beginning, Genie’s vocabulary revealed an extraordinary
attention to the visual world, which is the special province of the right
hemisphere—to color, shape, and size. All of her first two-word phrases
were about static objects. While normal children usually start talking
about people and actions or about the relations between people and
objects, Genie spoke primarily about the attributes of things: “black
shoe,” “lot bread.” While
summarizing the numerous tests made on Genie until 1979, Curtiss noted
that Genie’s performance had increased consistently over the years. For
example, on the Leiter International Performance Scale, which was
developed for use with deaf children and does not require verbal
instructions, she had an IQ of 38 in 1971, an IQ of 53 in 1972, an IQ of
65 in 1974, and an IQ of 74 in 1977. However, she had made much less
progress on tasks governed primarily by the left hemisphere. Even at the
age of 20, she still performed at a three-year-old level on tests of
auditory memory (a left-hemisphere task): she scored at a 6-to-12-year-old
level on tests of visual memory (which tap both hemispheres), and at an
adult level on tests of Gestalt perception (a right-hemisphere task). The
theory of language learning recently offered by Curtiss is an attempt to
explain Genie’s dependence on her right hemisphere. Possibly, Curtiss
wrote in a paper on cognitive linguistics published by UCLA, the
acquisition of language is what triggers the normal pattern of hemispheric
specialization. Therefore, if language is not acquired at the appropriate
time, “the cortical tissue normally committed for language and related
abilities may functionally atrophy,” Curtiss wrote. That would mean
that there are critical periods for the development of the left
hemisphere. If such development fails, later learning may be limited to
the right hemisphere. Obviously
Genie has many problems besides her lack of syntax or her dependence on
the right hemisphere of her brain. During her most formative years—her
entire childhood—she was malnourished, abused, unloved, bereft of any
toys or companionship. Naturally, she is strange in many ways. Yet her
language deficits remain particularly striking since she often found means
of explaining what was important to her. She used gestures if necessary
(starting in 1974, she received regular lessons in American Sign Language
to complement her spoken language). Once she wanted an egg-shaped
container that held panty hose that was made of chrome-colored plastic.
She signaled her desire by making the shape of an egg with her hands, and
then pointing to many other things with a chromium finish. In
her book, Curtiss describes how Genie occasionally used her limited
language to remember her past and to tell about details of her
confinement. “Father hit arm. Big wood. Genie cry,” she said once.
Another time, when Curtiss took her into the city to browse through shops,
Genie said, “Genie happy.” In
1978, Genie’s mother became her legal guardian. During all the years of
Genie’s rehabilitation, her mother had also received help. An eye
operation restored her sight, and a social worker tried to improve her
behavior toward Genie. Genie’s mother had never been held legally
responsible for the child’s inhuman treatment Charges of child abuse
were dismissed in 1970, when her lawyer argued that she “was, herself, a
victim of the same psychotic individual”—her husband. There was
“nothing to show purposeful or willful cruelty,” he said. Nevertheless,
for many years the court assigned a guardian for Genie. Shortly after
Genie’s mother was named guardian, she astounded the therapists and
researchers who had worked with Genie by filing a suit against Curtiss and
the Children’s Hospital among others—on behalf of herself and her
daughter—in which she charged that they had disclosed private and
confidential information concerning Genie and her mother for “prestige
and profit” and had subjected Genie to “unreasonable and outrageous”
testing, not for treatment, but to exploit Genie for personal and economic
benefits. According to the Los
Angeles Times, the lawyer who represents Genie’s mother estimated
that the actual damages could total $500,000. As
of 1981, the case had not yet come to court, but in the two years since it
was filed, Genie has been completely cut off from the professionals at
Children’s Hospital and UCLA. Since she is too old to be in a foster
home, she apparently is living in a board-and-care home for adults who
cannot live alone. The Los Angeles
Times reported that as of 1979 her mother was working as a domestic
servant. All research on Apart
from Chomsky and his followers, who believe that fundamental language
ability is innate and unrelated to intelligence, most psychologists
assume that the development of language is tied to—and emerges
from—the development of nonverbal intelligence, as described by
Piaget. However, Genie’s obvious nonverbal intelligence— her use of
tools, her drawings, her knowledge of causality, her mental maps of
space—did not lead her to an equivalent competence in the grammar normal
children acquire by the age of five. Current statusDate:
Tue, 11 Mar 2003 19:48:16 +0000 From:
Sandino L <delfin@garza.uatx.mx> Subject:
Genie Thanks
to all those who replied to my query (Linguist 14.677) about Genie.
I was offered interesting ideas, but most important, I received a
mail from Susan Curtiss with up-to-date information about Genie: ''I
understand you have asked Prof. Brunetti whether Genie is still alive.
She is indeed still alive, lives in a good board-and-care home, and
is, I hope, happy and thriving... And keep your fingers crossed. I'm
trying to find a way to see her and have some hope that this could happen
some time this year. I've
been dreaming of this for years, so if
this should happen it would indeed be a dream (more accurately ''many
dreams'') come true. Best, Susie Curtiss'' |