Why is the sunny side always up? Explaining the spatial mapping of concepts by language use

Date

2014-02-27

Authors

Goodhew, Stephanie Catherine
McGaw, Bethany
Kidd, Evan

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Volume Title

Publisher

Springer

Abstract

Humans appear to rely on spatial mappings to represent and describe concepts. The conceptual cueing effect describes the tendency for participants to orient attention to a spatial location following the presentation of an unrelated cue-word (e.g., orienting attention upwards after reading the word sky). To date, such effects have predominately been explained within the embodied cognition framework, according to which people’s attention is oriented based on prior experience (e.g., sky → up via perceptual simulation). However, this does not provide a compelling explanation for how abstract words have the same ability to orient attention. Why, for example, does ‘dream’ also orient attention upwards? We report on an experiment that investigated the role of language use (specifically, collocation between concept words and spatial words for up and down dimensions), and found that it predicted the cueing effect. The results suggest that language usage patterns may be instrumental in explaining conceptual cueing.

Description

Keywords

attention, conceptual cueing, embodied cognition, language

Citation

Psychonomic Bulletin and Review, March(2014)

Source

Psychonomic Bulletin & Review

Type

Journal article

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