A cup is no longer a ‘cup’ when it breaks into pieces. In contrast, clay stays ‘clay’ even if it is divided into small lumps. Understanding the difference between objects and substances is fundamental to our cognition, and without it, we are unable to judge ‘the sameness’ of an entity. In English and many other languages, objects are labeled with count nouns, which can take singular and plural forms, whereas substances are labeled with mass nouns that cannot be enumerated. Quine (1969) proposed that the grammatical distinction is necessary for children to learn the difference between objects and substances, and thus speakers of a language that seem to lack systematic count/mass marking, such as Japanese, fail to understand the distinction. ...
This study examined whether native Japanese speakers and second language (L2) speakers of Japanese u...
We conceptualize objects based on sensory and motor information gleaned from real-world experience. ...
When presented with an entity (e.g., a wooden honey-dipper) labeled with a novel noun, how does a l...
People distinguish objects from the substances that constitute them. Many languages also distinguish...
How does linguistic structure relate to how we construe reality? In many languages, countable indivi...
It is widely assumed that nouns in Chinese/Japanese-type languages are mass nouns because they lack ...
By some accounts, speakers of classifier languages such as Mandarin or Japanese, which lack count-ma...
Research investigating the relationship between language and cognition (Lucy, 1992b) shows that spea...
This article presents a novel set of observations concerning partitive constructions that indicate t...
PACLIC / The University of the Philippines Visayas Cebu College Cebu City, Philippines / November 20...
Previous work on object classification preferences shows that speakers of languages that lack morpho...
Language is a sub-component of human cognition. One important, though often unattained goal for both...
We investigate linguistic relativity effects by examining whether the grammatical count/mass distinc...
In this dissertation, I explore how linguistic representations (e.g., lexical and sentential meaning...
The count-mass distinction often served as a test case for asking how syntax and semantics are relat...
This study examined whether native Japanese speakers and second language (L2) speakers of Japanese u...
We conceptualize objects based on sensory and motor information gleaned from real-world experience. ...
When presented with an entity (e.g., a wooden honey-dipper) labeled with a novel noun, how does a l...
People distinguish objects from the substances that constitute them. Many languages also distinguish...
How does linguistic structure relate to how we construe reality? In many languages, countable indivi...
It is widely assumed that nouns in Chinese/Japanese-type languages are mass nouns because they lack ...
By some accounts, speakers of classifier languages such as Mandarin or Japanese, which lack count-ma...
Research investigating the relationship between language and cognition (Lucy, 1992b) shows that spea...
This article presents a novel set of observations concerning partitive constructions that indicate t...
PACLIC / The University of the Philippines Visayas Cebu College Cebu City, Philippines / November 20...
Previous work on object classification preferences shows that speakers of languages that lack morpho...
Language is a sub-component of human cognition. One important, though often unattained goal for both...
We investigate linguistic relativity effects by examining whether the grammatical count/mass distinc...
In this dissertation, I explore how linguistic representations (e.g., lexical and sentential meaning...
The count-mass distinction often served as a test case for asking how syntax and semantics are relat...
This study examined whether native Japanese speakers and second language (L2) speakers of Japanese u...
We conceptualize objects based on sensory and motor information gleaned from real-world experience. ...
When presented with an entity (e.g., a wooden honey-dipper) labeled with a novel noun, how does a l...