While embodied approaches of cognition have proved to be successful in explaining concrete concepts and words, they have more difficulties in accounting for abstract concepts and words, and several proposals have been put forward. This work aims to test the Words As Tools proposal, according to which both abstract and concrete concepts are grounded in perception, action and emotional systems, but linguistic information is more important for abstract than for concrete concept representation, due to the different ways they are acquired: while for the acquisition of the latter linguistic information might play a role, for the acquisition of the former it is instead crucial. We investigated the acquisition of concrete and abstract concepts and ...
One key issue for theories of cognition is how abstract concepts, such as freedom, are represented. ...
open6siAbstract concepts (“freedom”) differ from concrete ones (“cat”), as they do not have a bounde...
Abstract concepts (“freedom”) differ from concrete ones (“cat”), as they do not have a bounded, ide...
While embodied approaches of cognition have proved to be successful in explaining concrete concepts ...
<div><p>While embodied approaches of cognition have proved to be successful in explaining concrete c...
While embodied approaches of cognition have proved to be successful in explaining concrete concepts ...
While embodied approaches of cognition have proved to be successful in explaining con-crete concepts...
While embodied approaches of cognition have proved to be successful in explaining con-crete concepts...
One of the main challenges of embodied theories is accounting for meanings of abstract words. The mo...
One of the main challenges of embodied theories is accounting for meanings of abstract words. The mo...
One of the main challenges of embodied theories is accounting for meanings of abstract words. The mo...
One of the main challenges of embodied theories is accounting for meanings of abstract words. The mo...
Four experiments (E1–E2–E3–E4) investigated whether different acquisition modalities lead to the eme...
Abstract concepts (“freedom”) differ from concrete ones (“cat”), as they do not have a bounded, iden...
Four experiments (E1\u2013E2\u2013E3\u2013E4) investigated whether different acquisition modalities ...
One key issue for theories of cognition is how abstract concepts, such as freedom, are represented. ...
open6siAbstract concepts (“freedom”) differ from concrete ones (“cat”), as they do not have a bounde...
Abstract concepts (“freedom”) differ from concrete ones (“cat”), as they do not have a bounded, ide...
While embodied approaches of cognition have proved to be successful in explaining concrete concepts ...
<div><p>While embodied approaches of cognition have proved to be successful in explaining concrete c...
While embodied approaches of cognition have proved to be successful in explaining concrete concepts ...
While embodied approaches of cognition have proved to be successful in explaining con-crete concepts...
While embodied approaches of cognition have proved to be successful in explaining con-crete concepts...
One of the main challenges of embodied theories is accounting for meanings of abstract words. The mo...
One of the main challenges of embodied theories is accounting for meanings of abstract words. The mo...
One of the main challenges of embodied theories is accounting for meanings of abstract words. The mo...
One of the main challenges of embodied theories is accounting for meanings of abstract words. The mo...
Four experiments (E1–E2–E3–E4) investigated whether different acquisition modalities lead to the eme...
Abstract concepts (“freedom”) differ from concrete ones (“cat”), as they do not have a bounded, iden...
Four experiments (E1\u2013E2\u2013E3\u2013E4) investigated whether different acquisition modalities ...
One key issue for theories of cognition is how abstract concepts, such as freedom, are represented. ...
open6siAbstract concepts (“freedom”) differ from concrete ones (“cat”), as they do not have a bounde...
Abstract concepts (“freedom”) differ from concrete ones (“cat”), as they do not have a bounded, ide...