Abstract motion is no longer abstract
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Teenie Matlock
Abstract
Dynamic conceptualization is a fundamental notion in cognitive linguistics. Abstract motion is one type of dynamic conceptualization. It is said to structure descriptions of static scenes such as ‘The mountain range goes from Mexico to Canada’, and in doing so, invokes a subjective sense of motion or state change. In recent years, a growing body of experimental research supports this claim. However, additional work is needed to understand the dynamics of abstract motion and the extent to which it generalizes. This paper provides some background on abstract motion and reports two new experiments that investigate two unexplored types of abstract motion, including visual paths and pattern paths. Together, the results indicate that abstract motion plays a central role in language use and understanding.
© 2010 Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co. KG, Berlin/New York
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- Abstract motion is no longer abstract
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Articles in the same Issue
- Adaptive cognition without massive modularity
- Do classifiers predict differences in cognitive processing? A study of nominal classification in Mandarin Chinese
- The conceptual structure of deontic meaning: A model based on geometrical principles
- Talking about quantities in space: Vague quantifiers, context and similarity
- Abstract motion is no longer abstract
- Mutual bootstrapping between language and analogical processing
- Reviews