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Events and objects are similar cognitive entities.
Papafragou, Anna; Ji, Yue.
Affiliation
  • Papafragou A; Department of Linguistics, University of Pennsylvania, 3401-C Walnut St., Philadelphia, PA 19104, USA. Electronic address: anna4@sas.upenn.edu.
  • Ji Y; Department of English, School of Foreign Languages, Beijing Institute of Technology, No. 5 South Street, Zhongguancun, Haidian District, Beijing 100081, China. Electronic address: jiyue@bit.edu.cn.
Cogn Psychol ; 143: 101573, 2023 Jun.
Article in En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37178616
ABSTRACT
Logico-semantic theories have long noted parallels between the linguistic representation of temporal entities (events) and spatial entities (objects) bounded (or telic) predicates such as fix a car resemble count nouns such as sandcastle because they are "atoms" that have well-defined boundaries, contain discrete minimal parts and cannot be divided arbitrarily. By contrast, unbounded (or atelic) phrases such as drive a car resemble mass nouns such as sand in that they are unspecified for atomic features. Here, we demonstrate for the first time the parallels in the perceptual-cognitive representation of events and objects even in entirely non-linguistic tasks. Specifically, after viewers form categories of bounded or unbounded events, they can extend the category to objects or substances respectively (Experiments 1 and 2). Furthermore, in a training study, people successfully learn event-to-object mappings that respect atomicity (i.e., grouping bounded events with objects and unbounded events with substances) but fail to acquire the opposite, atomicity-violating mappings (Experiment 3). Finally, viewers can spontaneously draw connections between events and objects without any prior training (Experiment 4). These striking similarities between the mental representation of events and objects have implications for current theories of event cognition, as well as the relationship between language and thought.
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Full text: 1 Database: MEDLINE Main subject: Cognition / Language Limits: Humans Language: En Year: 2023 Type: Article

Full text: 1 Database: MEDLINE Main subject: Cognition / Language Limits: Humans Language: En Year: 2023 Type: Article