Is motion cognition influenced by the large-scale typological patterns proposed in Talmy’s (2000) two-way distinction between verb-framed (V) and satellite-framed (S) languages? Previous studies investigating this question have been limited to comparing two or three languages at a time and have come to conflicting results. We present the largest cross-linguistic study on this question to date, drawing on data from nineteen genealogically diverse languages, all investigated in the same behavioral paradigm and using the same stimuli. After controlling for the different dependencies in the data by means of multilevel regression models, we find no evidence that S- vs. V-framing affects nonverbal categorization of motion events. At the same time...
Motions verbs differ across languages in respect of spatial relations and syntactic/semantic concept...
Spatial systems show considerable variation across languages (Slobin 2004; Talmy 2000). When describ...
Spatial systems show considerable variation across languages (Slobin 2004; Talmy 2000). When describ...
Is motion cognition influenced by the large-scale typological patterns proposed in Talmy’s (2000) tw...
Is motion cognition influenced by the large-scale typological patterns proposed in Talmy’s (2000) tw...
Is motion cognition influenced by the large-scale typological patterns proposed in Talmy’s (2000) tw...
Is motion cognition influenced by the large-scale typological patterns proposed in Talmy’s (2000) tw...
Is motion cognition influenced by the large-scale typological patterns proposed in Talmy’s (2000) tw...
Is motion cognition influenced by the large-scale typological patterns proposed in Talmy’s (2000) tw...
International audienceThis paper presents a cross-linguistic study in progress that uses eye-trackin...
When classifying motion events, speakers classify motion in language-specific ways. In the followi...
Languages vary strikingly in how they encode motion events. In some languages (e.g. English), manner...
Crosslinguistic studies of expressions of motion events have found that Talmy's binary typology of v...
Languages vary strikingly in how they encode motion events. In some languages (e.g. English), manner...
Linguistic relativity is the influence of language on other realms of cognition. For instance, the w...
Motions verbs differ across languages in respect of spatial relations and syntactic/semantic concept...
Spatial systems show considerable variation across languages (Slobin 2004; Talmy 2000). When describ...
Spatial systems show considerable variation across languages (Slobin 2004; Talmy 2000). When describ...
Is motion cognition influenced by the large-scale typological patterns proposed in Talmy’s (2000) tw...
Is motion cognition influenced by the large-scale typological patterns proposed in Talmy’s (2000) tw...
Is motion cognition influenced by the large-scale typological patterns proposed in Talmy’s (2000) tw...
Is motion cognition influenced by the large-scale typological patterns proposed in Talmy’s (2000) tw...
Is motion cognition influenced by the large-scale typological patterns proposed in Talmy’s (2000) tw...
Is motion cognition influenced by the large-scale typological patterns proposed in Talmy’s (2000) tw...
International audienceThis paper presents a cross-linguistic study in progress that uses eye-trackin...
When classifying motion events, speakers classify motion in language-specific ways. In the followi...
Languages vary strikingly in how they encode motion events. In some languages (e.g. English), manner...
Crosslinguistic studies of expressions of motion events have found that Talmy's binary typology of v...
Languages vary strikingly in how they encode motion events. In some languages (e.g. English), manner...
Linguistic relativity is the influence of language on other realms of cognition. For instance, the w...
Motions verbs differ across languages in respect of spatial relations and syntactic/semantic concept...
Spatial systems show considerable variation across languages (Slobin 2004; Talmy 2000). When describ...
Spatial systems show considerable variation across languages (Slobin 2004; Talmy 2000). When describ...