The ‘standard picture of meaning’ suggests that natural languages are composed of two different kinds of words: concrete words whose meaning rely on observable properties of external objects and abstract words which are essentially linguistic constructs. In this study, we challenge this picture and support a new view of the nature and composition of abstract concepts suggesting that they also rely to a greater or lesser degree on body-related information. Specifically, we support a version of this new view which we call “x-ception theory” maintaining that abstract concepts are based on internal information of a proprioceptive, interoceptive and affective kind. Secondly, we address a methodological issue concerning the so-called concreteness...
Human language is the most powerful communication system that evolution has produced. Within this sy...
One of the main challenges of embodied theories is accounting for meanings of abstract words. The mo...
While embodied approaches of cognition have proved to be successful in explaining con-crete concepts...
The ‘standard picture of meaning’ suggests that natural languages are composed of two different kind...
The 'standard picture of meaning' suggests that natural languages are composed of two different kind...
In psycholinguistics, concepts are considered abstract if they do not apply to physical objects that...
According to the traditional view, both imageability and concreteness ratings reflect the way word m...
The distinction between abstract and concrete concepts is fundamental to cognitive linguistics and c...
In recent years, several scientific disciplines – linguistics, psychology, psycholinguistics, neurop...
This thesis is about the concrete-abstract distinction (‘concreteness’) as it applies in psycholingu...
The paper outlines one of the most important challenges that embodied and grounded theories need to ...
none2How are abstract concepts and words represented in the brain? That is the central question addr...
According to the traditional view, both imageability and concreteness ratings reflect the way word m...
The paper addresses the issue of abstract concepts in the embodied and grounded theories of language...
Cognitive science has a longstanding interest in the ways that people acquire and use abstract vs. c...
Human language is the most powerful communication system that evolution has produced. Within this sy...
One of the main challenges of embodied theories is accounting for meanings of abstract words. The mo...
While embodied approaches of cognition have proved to be successful in explaining con-crete concepts...
The ‘standard picture of meaning’ suggests that natural languages are composed of two different kind...
The 'standard picture of meaning' suggests that natural languages are composed of two different kind...
In psycholinguistics, concepts are considered abstract if they do not apply to physical objects that...
According to the traditional view, both imageability and concreteness ratings reflect the way word m...
The distinction between abstract and concrete concepts is fundamental to cognitive linguistics and c...
In recent years, several scientific disciplines – linguistics, psychology, psycholinguistics, neurop...
This thesis is about the concrete-abstract distinction (‘concreteness’) as it applies in psycholingu...
The paper outlines one of the most important challenges that embodied and grounded theories need to ...
none2How are abstract concepts and words represented in the brain? That is the central question addr...
According to the traditional view, both imageability and concreteness ratings reflect the way word m...
The paper addresses the issue of abstract concepts in the embodied and grounded theories of language...
Cognitive science has a longstanding interest in the ways that people acquire and use abstract vs. c...
Human language is the most powerful communication system that evolution has produced. Within this sy...
One of the main challenges of embodied theories is accounting for meanings of abstract words. The mo...
While embodied approaches of cognition have proved to be successful in explaining con-crete concepts...