The relation between linguistic categories and cognition: The case of numeral classifiers

被引:10
|
作者
Saalbach, Henrik [1 ]
Imai, Mutsumi [2 ]
机构
[1] ETH, Inst Behav Sci, CH-8092 Zurich, Switzerland
[2] Keio Univ Shonan Fujisawa, Dept Environm Informat, Endo, Kanagawa, Japan
来源
LANGUAGE AND COGNITIVE PROCESSES | 2012年 / 27卷 / 03期
关键词
Concepts; Linguistic relativity; Classifiers; Similarity; Inductive reasoning; GRAMMATICAL GENDER; UNIVERSAL ONTOLOGY; LANGUAGE; SIMILARITY; JAPANESE; ENGLISH; COLOR;
D O I
10.1080/01690965.2010.546585
中图分类号
H0 [语言学];
学科分类号
030303 ; 0501 ; 050102 ;
摘要
The classifier grammar system categorises things in the world in a way that is drastically different from the way nouns do. Previous research revealed amplified similarity among objects belonging to the same classifier category in Chinese speakers, but how this amplified classifier similarity effect arises was still an open question. The present research was conducted to address this question. For this purpose, we compared speakers of Chinese, Japanese (classifier languages), and German (nonclassifier language) on a range of cognitive tasks including similarity judgements, property induction, and fast-speed word-picture matching. Although Chinese and Japanese classifier systems are similar in their semantic structures, classifier classes for nouns are marked more systematically in Chinese than in Japanese. The amplified classifier similarity effect was found in Chinese but not in Japanese speakers. We explore the nature of the amplified classifier similarity effect and propose an explanation for how it may arise.
引用
收藏
页码:381 / 428
页数:48
相关论文
共 14 条
  • [1] Pattern borrowing, linguistic similarity, and new categories: Numeral classifiers in Mayan
    Law, Danny
    MORPHOLOGY, 2020, 30 (04) : 347 - 372
  • [2] Generating predictions based on semantic categories in a second language: A case of numeral classifiers in Japanese
    Mitsugi, Sanako
    IRAL-INTERNATIONAL REVIEW OF APPLIED LINGUISTICS IN LANGUAGE TEACHING, 2020, 58 (03): : 323 - 349
  • [3] A cross-cultural study of language and cognition: Numeral classifiers and solid object categorization
    Maria D. Sera
    Hooi Ling Soh
    Drew Brinker
    Jenny Yichun Kuo
    Judith W. Fuller
    Christopher M. Hammerly
    James Stevens
    Ruxue Shao
    Chris Batteen
    Dingcheng Li
    Nobuko Davis
    Wenting Cai
    Memory & Cognition, 2023, 51 : 601 - 622
  • [4] A cross-cultural study of language and cognition: Numeral classifiers and solid object categorization
    Sera, Maria D.
    Soh, Hooi Ling
    Brinker, Drew
    Kuo, Jenny Yichun
    Fuller, Judith W.
    Hammerly, Christopher M.
    Stevens, James
    Shao, Ruxue
    Batteen, Chris
    Li, Dingcheng
    Davis, Nobuko
    Cai, Wenting
    MEMORY & COGNITION, 2023, 51 (03) : 601 - 622
  • [5] Two types of plurals and numeral classifiers in classifier languages: the case of Korean
    Park, So-Young
    JOURNAL OF EAST ASIAN LINGUISTICS, 2022, 31 (02) : 139 - 177
  • [6] The Relationship Between Linguistic and Nonlinguistic Cognition: The Meaning of Representational Formats
    Kaup, Barbara
    Ulrich, Rolf
    PSYCHOLOGISCHE RUNDSCHAU, 2017, 68 (02) : 115 - 130
  • [7] On the relation between Bayes and fuzzy classifiers
    Visa, Sofia
    Ralescu, Anca
    2006 IEEE INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON FUZZY SYSTEMS, VOLS 1-5, 2006, : 863 - +
  • [8] "SCRUMMY FOAM RUBBER" REFLECTIONS ON THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN LINGUISTIC COGNITION AND PICA
    Pennisi, Paola
    RETI SAPERI LINGUAGGI-ITALIAN JOURNAL OF COGNITIVE SCIENCES, 2021, 8 (02): : 313 - 325
  • [9] The relation between event apprehension and utterance formulation in children: Evidence from linguistic omissions
    Bunger, Ann
    Trueswell, John C.
    Papafragou, Anna
    COGNITION, 2012, 122 (02) : 135 - 149
  • [10] On the relation between speech perception and loanword adaptation Cross-linguistic perception of Korean-illicit word-medial clusters
    Daland, Robert
    Oh, Mira
    Davidson, Lisa
    NATURAL LANGUAGE & LINGUISTIC THEORY, 2019, 37 (03) : 825 - 868