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How language influences spatial thinking, categorization of motion events, and gaze behavior: a cross-linguistic comparison

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  19 January 2024

Efstathia Soroli*
Affiliation:
Laboratoire Savoirs, Textes, Langage (STL), University of Lille, UMR 8163 – CNRS, Lille, France
*
Corresponding author: Efstathia Soroli; Email: efstathia.soroli@univ-Lille.fr
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Abstract

According to Talmy, in verb-framed languages (e.g., French), the core schema of an event (Path) is lexicalized, leaving the co-event (Manner) in the periphery of the sentence or optional; in satellite-framed languages (e.g., English), the core schema is jointly expressed with the co-event in construals that lexicalize Manner and express Path peripherally. Some studies suggest that such differences are only surface differences that cannot influence the cognitive processing of events, while others support that they can constrain both verbal and non-verbal processing. This study investigates whether such typological differences, together with other factors, influence visual processing and decision-making. English and French participants were tested in three eye-tracking tasks involving varied Manner–Path configurations and language to different degrees. Participants had to process a target motion event and choose the variant that looked most like the target (non-verbal categorization), then describe the events (production), and perform a similarity judgment after hearing a target sentence (verbal categorization). The results show massive cross-linguistic differences in production and additional partial language effects in visualization and similarity judgment patterns – highly dependent on the salience and nature of events and the degree of language involvement. The findings support a non-modular approach to language–thought relations and a fine-grained vision of the classic lexicalization/conflation theory.

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Article
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BYCreative Common License - NCCreative Common License - SA
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0), which permits non-commercial re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the same Creative Commons licence is used to distribute the re-used or adapted article and the original article is properly cited. The written permission of Cambridge University Press must be obtained prior to any commercial use.
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2024. Published by Cambridge University Press
Figure 0

Figure 1. Example of a motion event video.

Figure 1

Figure 2. Non-verbal categorization task: example of an experimental item involving a target (jump-out-of) and two variants: jump-into (Manner congruent) versus walk-out of (Path congruent).

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Figure 3. Areas of interest for events without boundary crossing (up/down) – cartoon scenes.

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Figure 4. Areas of interest for single-boundary-crossing events (into/out-of) – video clips.

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Figure 5. Focus of verbal responses across languages and core-event-types – cartoons.

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Figure 6. Focus of verbal responses across languages and core-event-types – videos.

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Figure 7. Locus of spatial information as expressed in verbs (V) and other devices (OTH) across languages – cartoons.

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Figure 8. Locus of spatial information as expressed in verbs (V) and other devices (OTH) across languages – videos.

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Figure 9. Response architecture with cartoons.

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Figure 10. Response architecture with videos.

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Figure 11. Mean number of Manner choices by French and English participants across categorization tasks.Note: Error bars indicate mean ± SE.

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Figure 12. Proportion of Manner choices across different Manner-item-types in French (A) and English (B).

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Figure 13. Proportion of Manner choices across different Path-item-types in French (A) and English (B).

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Figure 14. Mean reaction times on M choices of French and English participants across categorization tasks (error bars indicate mean ± SE).

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Figure 15. Manner- and Path-congruent choices: reaction times (in msec) of French and English participants across categorization tasks.

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Figure 16. Number of fixations to P ± M and Pbroad AoI with different item types in cartoon scenes.

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Figure 17. Number of fixations to P ± M and Pbroad AoI with different item types in video scenes.

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Figure 18. Fixation lengths on P ± M and Pbroad AoI with different item types in cartoon scenes.

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Figure 19. Fixation lengths on P ± M and Pbroad AoI with different item types in video scenes.

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Figure 20. Scene exploration in the production task – ‘climb/up’ event in the cartoon set: ballistic exploration by the French viewers (left) and linear exploration by the English viewers (right).

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Figure 21. Scene exploration in the production task – ‘jump/out-of’ event in the video set: ballistic exploration by the French viewers (left) and linear exploration by the English viewers (right).

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Figure 22. Mean fixation numbers on Manner- and Path-congruent areas by French and English viewers across categorization tasks.

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Figure 23. Mean fixation lengths (msec) on M- and P-congruent areas by French and English viewers across categorization tasks.

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Figure 24. Target scene exploration during non-verbal categorization: ballistic exploration by the French viewers (left) and linear exploration by the English viewers (right).

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Figure 25. A dynamic framework of the language–body/mind interaction.