LINGUIST List 13.3413

Mon Dec 23 2002

Confs: Linguistic Systems and Cognitive Categories

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  • robert, Linguistic Systems and Cognitive Categories, Paris France

    Message 1: Linguistic Systems and Cognitive Categories, Paris France

    Date: Sat, 21 Dec 2002 10:02:54 +0000
    From: robert <robertvjf.cnrs.fr>
    Subject: Linguistic Systems and Cognitive Categories, Paris France


    Space in Languages : Linguistic Systems and Cognitive Categories

    Short Title: Space in Languages Location: Paris, France Date: 07-Feb-2003 - 08-Feb-2003

    Contact Person: Stephane Robert Meeting Email: secretariat.tulivry.cnrs.fr

    Linguistic Subfield(s): Typology, Psycholinguistics, General Linguistics, Cognitive Science

    Meeting Description:

    Space has been often viewed as a universal cognitive primitive, an 'a priori form of intuition' that conditions all of our experience. However, various studies show that linguistic and cultural systems determine - at least partially - the nature and cognitive accessibility of the information selected by speakers, thereby casting some doubts on the supposedly universal properties of the category of space. This evidence then raises questions concerning the impact of linguistic categorization on perception, as well as the existence of a single (a-modal) system or of two distinct (linguistic vs. perceptual and motor) systems of spatial representations. First, how is space encoded across languages and to what extent does space, as it is linguistically encoded, reflect forms of perceptual experience and which aspects of this experience do languages encode? Does space constitute a pure and primitive category from which other linguistic meanings are then derived ? The study of space can then be reframed in terms of several fundamental questions, that will be addressed during this conference from the point of view of linguistics (typology, diachrony, sign-language), cognitive anthropology, the philosophy of language, psycholinguistics, and neurosciences. As illustrated by the Kantian tradition and by a number of cognitive theories, space has been often viewed as a universal cognitive primitive, an 'a priori form of intuition' that conditions all of our experience. From this point of view, it is of particular interest to study the linguistic expression of space, since languages seem to capture and to make explicit the constraints of experience on the construction of spatial reference. At the same time, language confers to spatial representations the property of referential 'detachability', that distinguishes these representations from those that are produced by the perceptual experience of space. This fundamental property of language allows speakers to dissociate and to choose among different components of spatial reference, as well as to use spatial morphemes to express other and/or more abstract meanings, such as temporal, causal or argumentative relations.

    A question then arises concerning the primitive and generative nature of the category of space in languages. To what extent does space, as it is linguistically encoded, reflect forms of perceptual experience and which aspects of this experience do languages encode? Does space constitute a pure and primitive category from which other linguistic meanings are then derived? This question has been raised by cognitive grammars in general and by metaphor theory in particular. It is also particularly relevant in the light of numerous derivations that can be observed in the history of languages, often indicating that a given term evolves from a concrete spatial meaning to an abstract discourse one. What are then the cognitive mechanisms that allow these transitions? Inversely, some recent linguistic analyses argue that spatial values are neither basic nor even purely spatial, but rather that spatial terms always carry other values, for example related to the functional properties of objects, their force or resistance, or the goals towards which speakers construct spatial relations in their utterances. According to this conception, space in language is therefore not a primitive category, but already the result of some construction. What types of evidence can be brought to bear on these different conceptions?

    Furthermore, in the last twenty years, many studies in linguistics, psycholinguistics, and cultural anthropology have revealed the existence of rather varied spatial systems across languages and cultures. These variations concern, for example, the nature of the linguistic devices expressing spatial information (e.g. verbs, affixes, classifiers, particles), the particular distinctions they encode, and the reference systems that are used by speakers (absolute, egocentric, relative). In addition, various studies show that linguistic and cultural systems determine - at least partially - the nature and cognitive accessibility of the information selected by speakers, thereby casting some doubts on the supposedly universal properties of the category of space. This evidence then raises questions concerning the impact of linguistic categorization on perception, as well as the existence of a single (a-modal) system or of two distinct (linguistic vs. perceptual and motor) systems of spatial representations.

    The study of space can then be reframed in terms of several fundamental questions, that will be addressed during this conference from the point of view of linguistics (typology, diachrony, sign-language), cognitive anthropology, the philosophy of language, psycholinguistics, and neurosciences.

    List of participants and papers to be presented

    The precise program will be announced in January

    Melissa Bowerman (Max-Planck Institute for Psycholinguistics, Nijmegen) Constructing language-specific spatial categories in first language acquisition

    Pierre Cadiot (Universite de Paris 8, Laboratoire LATTICE) & Franck Lebas (Universite Clermont-Ferrand 2) The French movement verb MONTER as a challenge to the status of spatial reference

    Denis Creissels (Laboratoire Dynamique du Langage, Universite Lyon 2) Encoding the distinction between localization, source of a movement and direction of a movement : a typological study

    Michel Denis (LIMSI, Orsay) Deficits in spatial discourse: the case of Alzheimer patients

    Jerome Dokic & Elisabeth Pacherie (Institut Jean Nicod, EHESS Paris) Molyneux's question and frames of reference

    Colette Grinevald (Laboratoire Dynamique du Langage, Universite Lyon 2) The expression of static location in a typological perspective

    Maya Hickmann (Laboratoire Cognition et Developpement, Universite de Paris 5) The relativity of motion in first language acquisition

    Anetta Kopecka (Laboratoire Dynamique du Langage, Universite Lyon 2) The semantic structure of prefixed motion verbs in French: typological perspectives

    Barbara Landau (Department of Cognitive Science, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore) (De)Coupling of spatial language and spatial cognition

    Alain Peyraube (Centre de Recherche sur les Langues d'Asie Orientale, Paris) On the history of place words and localizers in Chinese : a cognitive approach

    Marie-Anne Sallandre (Universite Paris 8) Iconicity in discourse, the role of space in French sign language

    Chris Sinha (Department of Psychology, University of Portsmouth) Mapping and construal in spatial language and conceptualization: language variation and acquisition.

    Dan Slobin (Department of Psychology University of California, Berkeley) What makes manner of motion salient ?

    Claude Vandeloise (State University of Louisiana, Baton Rouge) Are there spatial prepositions ?

    Yves-Marie Visetti (Laboratoire LATTICE, ENS Paris) Semantics and its models of perception and action

    Organizing committee Maya Hickmann Stephane Robert Yves-Marie Visetti