| Literature DB >> 27062226 |
Cristina D Rabaglia1, Sam J Maglio2, Madelaine Krehm3, Jin H Seok4, Yaacov Trope3.
Abstract
Human languages may be more than completely arbitrary symbolic systems. A growing literature supports sound symbolism, or the existence of consistent, intuitive relationships between speech sounds and specific concepts. Prior work establishes that these sound-to-meaning mappings can shape language-related judgments and decisions, but do their effects generalize beyond merely the linguistic and truly color how we navigate our environment? We examine this possibility, relating a predominant sound symbolic distinction (vowel frontness) to a novel associate (spatial proximity) in five studies. We show that changing one vowel in a label can influence estimations of distance, impacting judgment, perception, and action. The results (1) provide the first experimental support for a relationship between vowels and spatial distance and (2) demonstrate that sound-to-meaning mappings have outcomes that extend beyond just language and can - through a single sound - influence how we perceive and behave toward objects in the world.Entities:
Keywords: Distance; Language; Sound symbolism; Spatial cognition
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27062226 DOI: 10.1016/j.cognition.2016.04.001
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cognition ISSN: 0010-0277