Body part representations in verbal semantics

被引:44
作者
Bergen, Benjamin [1 ]
Lau, Ting-Ting Chan [2 ]
Narayan, Shweta [3 ]
Stojanovic, Diana [2 ]
Wheeler, Kathryn [2 ]
机构
[1] Univ Calif San Diego, Dept Cognit Sci, La Jolla, CA 92093 USA
[2] Univ Hawaii, Manoa, HI USA
[3] Univ Calif Berkeley, Berkeley, CA 94720 USA
关键词
HAND MOVEMENTS; MOTOR SYSTEM; PREMOTOR; LANGUAGE; AREAS; IMAGERY; CORTEX; RECOGNITION; ACTIVATION; RESONANCE;
D O I
10.3758/MC.38.7.969
中图分类号
B84 [心理学];
学科分类号
04 ; 0402 ;
摘要
Embodied theories of language propose that word meaning is inextricably tied to grounded in mental representations of perceptual, motor, and affective experiences of the world. The four experiments described in this article demonstrate that accessing the meanings of action verbs like smile, punch, and kick requires language understanders to activate modality-specific cognitive representations responsible for performing and perceiving those same actions. The main task used is a word image matching task, where participants see an action verb and an image depicting an action. Their task is to decide as quickly as possible whether the verb and the image depict the same action. Of critical interest is participants' behavior when the verb and image do not match, in which case the two actions can use the same effector or different effectors. In Experiment 1, we found that participants took significantly longer to reject a verb image pair when the actions depicted by the image and denoted by the verb used the same effector than when they used different effectors. Experiment 2 yielded the same result when the order of presentation was reversed, replicating the effect in Cantonese. Experiment 3 replicated the effect in English with a verb verb near-synonym task, and in Experiment 4, we once again replicated the effect with learners of English as a second language. This robust interference effect, whereby a shared effector slows discrimination, shows that language understanders activate effector-specific neurocognitive representations during both picture perception and action word understanding.
引用
收藏
页码:969 / 981
页数:13
相关论文
共 48 条
  • [1] Bailey D, 1998, PROCEEDINGS OF THE TWENTIETH ANNUAL CONFERENCE OF THE COGNITIVE SCIENCE SOCIETY, P84
  • [2] Barsalou LW, 1999, BEHAV BRAIN SCI, V22, P577, DOI 10.1017/S0140525X99532147
  • [3] BERGEN B, 2008, METHODS COGNITIVE LI, P277
  • [4] Bergen B.K., 2005, Proceedings of the 27th Annual Conference of the Cognitive Science Society, P238
  • [5] Grammatical aspect and mental simulation
    Bergen, Benjamin
    Wheeler, Kathryn
    [J]. BRAIN AND LANGUAGE, 2010, 112 (03) : 150 - 158
  • [6] Spatial and linguistic aspects of visual imagery in sentence comprehension
    Bergen, Benjamin K.
    Lindsay, Shane
    Matlock, Teenie
    Narayanan, Srini
    [J]. COGNITIVE SCIENCE, 2007, 31 (05) : 733 - 764
  • [7] Bergen BK, 2005, CONSTR APPROACH LANG, V3, P147
  • [8] The action-sentence compatibility effect: It's all in the timing
    Borreggine, Kristin L.
    Kaschak, Michael P.
    [J]. COGNITIVE SCIENCE, 2006, 30 (06) : 1097 - 1112
  • [9] Listening to action-related sentences modulates the activity of the motor system: A combined TMS and behavioral study
    Buccino, G
    Riggio, L
    Melli, G
    Binkofski, F
    Gallese, V
    Rizzolatti, G
    [J]. COGNITIVE BRAIN RESEARCH, 2005, 24 (03): : 355 - 363
  • [10] Action observation activates premotor and parietal areas in a somatotopic manner: an fMRI study
    Buccino, G
    Binkofski, F
    Fink, GR
    Fadiga, L
    Fogassi, L
    Gallese, V
    Seitz, RJ
    Zilles, K
    Rizzolatti, G
    Freund, HJ
    [J]. EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE, 2001, 13 (02) : 400 - 404