This chapter first provides an overview of traditional work on the Talmyannotion of fictive motion, including experimental research by Matlock and herassociates, which it then places within the purview of a broader theory of cognitiongrounded in recent developments of the Lakoffian notion of cognitive model. Thisbroader approach combines Talmys work on perception-based construal and recentresearch on knowledge-based re-construal through metonymy. In it, a fictive motionexpression, once elaborated in terms of focal attention, is treated as a metonymicsource domain with a motion-based hypothetical target domain constructed throughmental simulation. A similar analysis has been proposed for two so-called imageschematransformations: path focus t...
International audienceFictive motion (e.g. ‘The highway runs along the coast’) is a pervasive phenom...
How do we understand time and other entities we can neither touch nor see? One possibility is that w...
In his book Visual thinking, Arnheim (1969) writes: ... cognitive operations called thinking are not...
Fictive Motion is the metaphoric use of path relators in the expression of spatial relations or conf...
Fictive Motion is the metaphoric use of path relators in the expression of spatial relations or conf...
This book presents a corpus-based study of verbs used in expressions of fictive motion, which refers...
© 2016 John Benjamins Publishing Company. This is the accepted manuscript of a chapter published in ...
Relying upon the notions of space and motion in their correlation with language and human cognition,...
Relying upon the notions of space and motion in their correlation with language and human cognition,...
Relying upon the notions of space and motion in their correlation with language and human cognition,...
Fictive motion (e.g. ‘The highway runs along the coast’) is a pervasive phenomenon in language that ...
This paper addresses the topic of metaphorical motion and to provide an analysis of metaphorical mo...
: This paper focuses on a specific subtype of motion, known in the field as fictive motion. In our a...
This paper addresses the topic of metaphorical motion and to provide an analysis of metaphorical mo...
Over the past few decades, our understanding of the cognitive processes underpinning our navigationa...
International audienceFictive motion (e.g. ‘The highway runs along the coast’) is a pervasive phenom...
How do we understand time and other entities we can neither touch nor see? One possibility is that w...
In his book Visual thinking, Arnheim (1969) writes: ... cognitive operations called thinking are not...
Fictive Motion is the metaphoric use of path relators in the expression of spatial relations or conf...
Fictive Motion is the metaphoric use of path relators in the expression of spatial relations or conf...
This book presents a corpus-based study of verbs used in expressions of fictive motion, which refers...
© 2016 John Benjamins Publishing Company. This is the accepted manuscript of a chapter published in ...
Relying upon the notions of space and motion in their correlation with language and human cognition,...
Relying upon the notions of space and motion in their correlation with language and human cognition,...
Relying upon the notions of space and motion in their correlation with language and human cognition,...
Fictive motion (e.g. ‘The highway runs along the coast’) is a pervasive phenomenon in language that ...
This paper addresses the topic of metaphorical motion and to provide an analysis of metaphorical mo...
: This paper focuses on a specific subtype of motion, known in the field as fictive motion. In our a...
This paper addresses the topic of metaphorical motion and to provide an analysis of metaphorical mo...
Over the past few decades, our understanding of the cognitive processes underpinning our navigationa...
International audienceFictive motion (e.g. ‘The highway runs along the coast’) is a pervasive phenom...
How do we understand time and other entities we can neither touch nor see? One possibility is that w...
In his book Visual thinking, Arnheim (1969) writes: ... cognitive operations called thinking are not...