FYI: New John Benjamins Journal: Cognitive Linguistic Studies
| Author: |
Karin Plijnaar
|
| Linguistic Field(s): |
Psycholinguistics
Neurolinguistics Cognitive Science |
| FYI Body: |
John Benjamins Publishing is pleased to announce a new journal in Cognitive Linguistics: Cognitive Linguistic Studies Editors Xu Wen | Southwest University, Beibei, Chongqing | xuwen@swu.edu.cn Zoltán Kövecses | Eötvös Loránd University Associate Editors Antonio Barcelona | University of Córdoba Stefan Th. Gries | University of California, Santa Barbara John R. Taylor | Christchurch, NZ Review Editor Arie Verhagen | Leiden University ISSN 2213-8722 | E-ISSN 2213-8730 Cognitive Linguistic Studies is an interdisciplinary, multidisciplinary, and transdisciplinary journal of cognitive linguistics, cognitive science, and cognitive neuroscience. It explores implications from and for psycholinguistic, computational, neuroscientific, cross-cultural and cross-linguistic research. Cognitive Linguistic Studies provides a forum for high-quality linguistic research on topics which investigate the interaction between language and human cognition. It offers new insights not only into linguistic phenomena but also into a wide variety of social, psychological, and cultural phenomena. The journal welcomes authoritative, innovative cognitive scholarship from all viewpoints and practices. The contributions mainly focus on topics such as: phenomenology-based cognitive linguistic research (such as categorization, prototype theory/semantics, lexical network theory, critical counterclaims, embodied realism, cognitive models, metaphor, metonymy, image schemas, imagery, naturalness, iconicity, and cognitive pragmatics) gestalt-psychology based cognitive linguistic research (such as cognitive grammar, construction grammar, constructional syntax, force dynamics, the relation of grammar to cognition) cognitive discourse analysis (such as mental space theory, blending theory, cognitive stylistics, cognitive poetics, political discourse)cognitive sociolinguistics (such as usage-based conception of language, language variation, ideology, cultural models, cultural linguistics)cognitive psycholinguistics (such as language processing, language acquisition, figurative language understanding, usage-based theory of acquisition, neural theory of language)cognitive historical linguistics (such as historical/diachronic semantics, grammaticalization theory, constructionalization, lexicalization, subjectivity, intersubjectivity and subjectification)contrastive cognitive linguistics (such as cross-cultural linguistics, cognitive linguistic typology), applied cognitive linguistics (such as the application of cognitive linguistics in language pedagogy, learning science, translation studies, lexicography, semiotics, and literary studies). Editorial Board: Mira Ariel | Tel Aviv University Paul Chilton | Lancaster University Ewa Dąbrowska | Northumbria University Vyvyan Evans | Bangor University Ad Foolen | Radboud University Nijmegen Mirjam Fried | Charles University Dirk Geeraerts | KU Leuven Peter Harder | University of Copenhagen Mark Johnson | University of Oregon Ronald W. Langacker | University of California, San Diego Jan Nuyts | University of Antwerp Klaus-Uwe Panther | Universität Hamburg Marné Pienaar | University of Johannesburg Martin Pütz | Universität Koblenz-Landau Günter Radden | Universität Hamburg Jiaxuan Shen | Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, Beijing Chris Sinha | Lund University Dinfang Shu | Shanghai International Studies University Peter Stockwell | University of Nottingham Leonard Talmy | Berkeley, CA Elizabeth Closs Traugott | Stanford University |

