Literature DB >> 16043167

When English proposes what Greek presupposes: the cross-linguistic encoding of motion events.

Anna Papafragou1, Christine Massey, Lila Gleitman.   

Abstract

How do we talk about events we perceive? And how tight is the connection between linguistic and non-linguistic representations of events? To address these questions, we experimentally compared motion descriptions produced by children and adults in two typologically distinct languages, Greek and English. Our findings confirm a well-known asymmetry between the two languages, such that English speakers are overall more likely to include manner of motion information than Greek speakers. However, mention of manner of motion in Greek speakers' descriptions increases significantly when manner is not inferable; by contrast, inferability of manner has no measurable effect on motion descriptions in English, where manner is already preferentially encoded. These results show that speakers actively monitor aspects of event structure, which do not find their way into linguistic descriptions. We conclude that, in regard to the differential encoding of path and manner, which has sometimes been offered as a prime example of the effects of language encoding on non-linguistic thought, surface linguistic encoding neither faithfully represents nor strongly constrains our mental representation of events.

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Year:  2005        PMID: 16043167     DOI: 10.1016/j.cognition.2005.05.005

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Cognition        ISSN: 0010-0277


  11 in total

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9.  Does language guide event perception? Evidence from eye movements.

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10.  How Children and Adults Encode Causative Events Cross-Linguistically: Implications for Language Production and Attention.

Authors:  Ann Bunger; Dimitrios Skordos; John C Trueswell; Anna Papafragou
Journal:  Lang Cogn Neurosci       Date:  2016-05-13       Impact factor: 2.331

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