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Ethan O. Nadler; Douglas Guilbeault; Sofronia M. Ringold; T. R. Williamson; Antoine Bellemare-Pepin; Iulia M. Com?a; Karim Jerbi; Srini Narayanan; Lisa Aziz-Zadeh – Cognitive Science, 2025
Can metaphorical reasoning involving embodied experience--such as color perception--be learned from the statistics of language alone? Recent work finds that colorblind individuals robustly understand and reason abstractly about color, implying that color associations in everyday language might contribute to the metaphorical understanding of color.…
Descriptors: Color, Painting (Visual Arts), Natural Language Processing, Figurative Language
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Burns, Patrick; McCormack, Teresa; Jaroslawska, Agnieszka J.; O'Connor, Patrick A.; Caruso, Eugene M. – Cognitive Science, 2019
Human languages typically employ a variety of spatial metaphors for time (e.g., "I'm looking forward to the weekend"). The metaphorical grounding of time in space is also evident in gesture. The gestures that are performed when talking about time bolster the view that people sometimes think about regions of time as if they were locations…
Descriptors: Time, Nonverbal Communication, Children, Adolescents
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Nunez, Rafael E.; Cornejo, Carlos – Cognitive Science, 2012
The Aymara of the Andes use absolute (cardinal) frames of reference for describing the relative position of ordinary objects. However, rather than encoding them in available absolute lexemes, they do it in lexemes that are intrinsic to the body: "nayra" ("front") and "qhipa" ("back"), denoting east and west,…
Descriptors: American Indians, American Indian Culture, American Indian Languages, Adults