It is assumed linguistic symbols must be grounded in perceptual information to attain meaning, because the sound of a word in a language has an arbitrary relation with its referent. This paper demonstrates that a strong arbitrariness claim should be reconsidered. In a computational study, we showed that one phonological feature (nasals in the beginning of a word) predicted negative valence in three European languages (English, Dutch, and German) and positive valence in Chinese. In three experiments, we tested whether participants used this feature in estimating the valence of a word. In Experiment 1, Chinese and Dutch participants rated the valence of written valence-neutral words, with Chinese participants rating the nasal-first neutral-va...
Nearly 400 million people worldwide speak English as a second language (ESL), yet little research ha...
Sound symbolism refers to a non-arbitrary relationship between the sound of a word and its meaning. ...
It is widely assumed that one of the fundamental properties of spoken language is the arbitrary rela...
Language evolved in a dangerous environment with limited resources. Under such conditions, an effect...
Rapidly communicating the emotional valence of stimuli (i.e., negativity or positivity) is vital for...
It is widely accepted that the valence of a word (neutral, positive, or negative) influences lexical...
Rapidly communicating the emotional valence of stimuli (i.e., negativity or positivity) is vital for...
The relationship between meanings of words and their sound shapes is to a large extent arbitrary, bu...
This paper discusses extensively how verbal valency can be compared across languages, based on the e...
The existence of sound-symbolism (or a non-arbitrary link between form and meaning) is well-attested...
The influence of emotional content on language processing remains unclear. Previous research conduct...
The paper describes a method of word phonosemantics estimation. We treat phonosemantics as a subcons...
The purpose of this study is to investigate the relationship between the phonetic content of prose t...
The purpose of this study is to investigate the relationship between the phonetic content of prose t...
Although numerous examples of sound symbolism exist in spoken language, little is known about whethe...
Nearly 400 million people worldwide speak English as a second language (ESL), yet little research ha...
Sound symbolism refers to a non-arbitrary relationship between the sound of a word and its meaning. ...
It is widely assumed that one of the fundamental properties of spoken language is the arbitrary rela...
Language evolved in a dangerous environment with limited resources. Under such conditions, an effect...
Rapidly communicating the emotional valence of stimuli (i.e., negativity or positivity) is vital for...
It is widely accepted that the valence of a word (neutral, positive, or negative) influences lexical...
Rapidly communicating the emotional valence of stimuli (i.e., negativity or positivity) is vital for...
The relationship between meanings of words and their sound shapes is to a large extent arbitrary, bu...
This paper discusses extensively how verbal valency can be compared across languages, based on the e...
The existence of sound-symbolism (or a non-arbitrary link between form and meaning) is well-attested...
The influence of emotional content on language processing remains unclear. Previous research conduct...
The paper describes a method of word phonosemantics estimation. We treat phonosemantics as a subcons...
The purpose of this study is to investigate the relationship between the phonetic content of prose t...
The purpose of this study is to investigate the relationship between the phonetic content of prose t...
Although numerous examples of sound symbolism exist in spoken language, little is known about whethe...
Nearly 400 million people worldwide speak English as a second language (ESL), yet little research ha...
Sound symbolism refers to a non-arbitrary relationship between the sound of a word and its meaning. ...
It is widely assumed that one of the fundamental properties of spoken language is the arbitrary rela...