| Literature DB >> 27693942 |
Joshua K Hartshorne1, Timothy J O'Donnell2, Yasutada Sudo3, Miki Uruwashi4, Miseon Lee5, Jesse Snedeker4.
Abstract
In acquiring language, children must learn to appropriately place the different participants of an event (e.g., causal agent, affected entity) into the correct syntactic positions (e.g., subject, object) so that listeners will know who did what to whom. While many of these mappings can be characterized by broad generalizations, both within and across languages (e.g., semantic agents tend to be mapped onto syntactic subjects), not all verbs fit neatly into these generalizations. One particularly striking example is verbs of psychological state: The experiencer of the state can appear as either the subject (Agnes fears/hates/loves Bartholomew) or the direct object (Agnes frightens/angers/delights Bartholomew). The present studies explore whether this apparent variability in subject/object mapping may actually result from differences in these verbs' underlying meanings. Specifically, we suggest that verbs like fear describe a habitual attitude towards some entity whereas verbs like frighten describe an externally caused emotional episode. We find that this distinction systematically characterizes verbs in English, Mandarin, and Korean. This pattern is generalized to novel verbs by adults in English, Japanese, and Russian, and even by English-speaking children who are just beginning to acquire psych verbs. This results support a broad role for systematic mappings between semantics and syntax in language acquisition.Entities:
Keywords: Argument structure; Psych verbs; Psychological states; Thematic roles; Verbs
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27693942 PMCID: PMC5143181 DOI: 10.1016/j.cognition.2016.08.008
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cognition ISSN: 0010-0277