Literature DB >> 29851286

Knowing the Meaning of a Word by the Linguistic and Perceptual Company It Keeps.

Max M Louwerse1.   

Abstract

Debates on meaning and cognition suggest that an embodied cognition account is exclusive of a symbolic cognition account. Decades of research in the cognitive sciences have, however, shown that these accounts are not at all mutually exclusive. Acknowledging cognition is both symbolic and embodied generates more relevant questions that propel, rather than divide, the cognitive sciences: questions such as how computational symbolic findings map onto experimental embodied findings, and under what conditions cognition is relatively more symbolic or embodied in nature. The current paper revisits the Symbol Interdependency Hypothesis, which argues that language encodes perceptual information and that language users rely on these language statistics in cognitive processes. It argues that the claim that words are abstract, amodal, and arbitrary symbols and therefore must always be grounded to become meaningful is an oversimplification of the language system. Instead, language has evolved such that it maps onto the perceptual system, whereby language users rely on language statistics, which allow for bootstrapping meaning also when grounding is limited.
© 2018 The Authors. Topics in Cognitive Science published by Wiley Periodicals, Inc. on behalf of Cognitive Science Society.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Arbitrariness; Embodied cognition; Language statistics; Perceptual simulation; Symbolic cognition

Mesh:

Year:  2018        PMID: 29851286     DOI: 10.1111/tops.12349

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Top Cogn Sci        ISSN: 1756-8757


  6 in total

1.  Do metaphorical sharks bite? Simulation and abstraction in metaphor processing.

Authors:  Hamad Al-Azary; Albert N Katz
Journal:  Mem Cognit       Date:  2020-11-02

2.  Redundancy, isomorphism, and propagative mechanisms between emotional and amodal representations of words: A computational study.

Authors:  José Á Martínez-Huertas; Guillermo Jorge-Botana; José M Luzón; Ricardo Olmos
Journal:  Mem Cognit       Date:  2021-02

3.  An Integrated Neural Decoder of Linguistic and Experiential Meaning.

Authors:  Andrew James Anderson; Jeffrey R Binder; Leonardo Fernandino; Colin J Humphries; Lisa L Conant; Rajeev D S Raizada; Feng Lin; Edmund C Lalor
Journal:  J Neurosci       Date:  2019-09-30       Impact factor: 6.167

Review 4.  Bridging the theoretical gap between semantic representation models without the pressure of a ranking: some lessons learnt from LSA.

Authors:  Guillermo Jorge-Botana; Ricardo Olmos; José María Luzón
Journal:  Cogn Process       Date:  2019-09-25

5.  Body-object interaction effect in word recognition and its relationship with screen time in Chinese children.

Authors:  Zhengye Xu; Duo Liu
Journal:  Read Writ       Date:  2022-01-29

6.  A test of indirect grounding of abstract concepts using multimodal distributional semantics.

Authors:  Akira Utsumi
Journal:  Front Psychol       Date:  2022-10-04
  6 in total

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