Cognitive Linguistics (26th of May)

 0    265 tarjetas    kszulin
descargar mp3 imprimir jugar test de práctica
 
término English definición English
What is the main purpose of introducing conceptual blending theory in cognitive linguistics?
empezar lección
To replace the static picture of conceptualization with a more dynamic approach that includes aspects of ongoing language processing
Who originally proposed conceptual blending theory?
empezar lección
Gilles Fauconnier and Mark Turner
What dynamic aspect of language processing does conceptual blending theory address that traditional cognitive linguistics did not?
empezar lección
How mental spaces are constructed and blended during online language processing
What are the three main deficiencies of traditional metaphor and metonymy analysis according to the text?
empezar lección
It doesn't consider specific context, it only offers one-way explanation from source to target, and it suggests metaphorical mapping is fully processed and lexicalized
How does conceptual blending theory address the limitation that traditional analysis doesn't consider specific context?
empezar lección
By using context-dependent mental spaces constructed during online processing
What is a mental space in conceptual blending theory?
empezar lección
Small conceptual packets constructed as we think and talk, for purposes of local understanding and action, operating in working memory but built partly from long-term memory
How do mental spaces differ from cognitive models stored in long-term memory?
empezar lección
Mental spaces are online conceptual representations constructed under the influence of incoming information, while cognitive models are stored structures in long-term memory
What is the relationship between mental spaces and working memory?
empezar lección
Mental spaces operate in working memory
In the "shot in the arm" example, what are the two input spaces?
empezar lección
Hiring space and injection space
What specific information is contained in the hiring space?
empezar lección
Volkswagen has hired a new director (Wolfgang Bernhard), investors celebrated by raising VW's market cap by $1 billion
What specific information is contained in the injection space?
empezar lección
A doctor or nurse administering a syringe containing medicine intravenously in the arm of a patient, with the purpose of improving health
What is a blended space?
empezar lección
A new conceptual space containing information projected from both input spaces, characterized by emergent structure
What is meant by "emergent structure" in a blended space?
empezar lección
A new, unified conceptual structure in the blended space that differs from both input spaces and is less complex than their simple addition
What three cognitive processes are involved in creating a blended space?
empezar lección
Composition, completion, and elaboration
How does the process of completion work in the "shot in the arm" example?
empezar lección
The sentence underspecifies the agent and instrument for the injection, so these indispensable elements from the injection frame are added to the blend
What is compression in conceptual blending?
empezar lección
The process by which conceptual complexity from several sources is reduced considerably, creating a unified and cognitively manageable structure
What is the ultimate goal of compression according to Fauconnier and Turner?
empezar lección
To create a unified conceptual structure with "human scale" that is cognitively manageable
What are vital relations in conceptual blending?
empezar lección
Relations like identity, space, time, cause-effect, and part-whole that underlie cross-mappings between input spaces
Which vital relation is most prominent in metaphor according to the text?
empezar lección
Identity
How does compression create a cognitively manageable structure?
empezar lección
By reducing the conceptual complexity of inputs from several sources to a unified structure that has "human scale"
What is space compression and which example illustrates it?
empezar lección
Compression of spatially distant elements; illustrated by "American-type tornado"
What two input spaces are involved in the "American-type tornado" blend?
empezar lección
Knowledge of tornado effects in the US/Caribbean, and knowledge of typical European thunderstorm effects
What is time compression and which example illustrates it?
empezar lección
Compression of temporally distant elements; illustrated by the regatta blend (1853 Northern Light vs 1993 Great American II)
What two input spaces are involved in the regatta blend?
empezar lección
The 1853 voyage of Northern Light and the 1993 voyage of Great American II
What is cause-effect compression and which example illustrates it?
empezar lección
Compression of a causal chain; illustrated by "John broke the window"
What intermediate stages are compressed in the "John broke the window" blend?
empezar lección
Bending knees, putting out hand, grasping stone, pulling stone towards body, and the actual contact of the stone with the window
What is part-whole compression and which example illustrates it?
empezar lección
Compression of part-whole relations; illustrated by "That's Jane Doe" (face → whole person)
What are the two input spaces in the "That's Jane Doe" blend?
empezar lección
The person's face (or voice) and the person as a whole
What are blended properties in conceptual blending theory?
empezar lección
Properties that result from compression and are attached to concepts in the blended space
What are the five governing principles of conceptual blending mentioned in the text?
empezar lección
Topology principle, principle of promoting vital relations, integration principle, unpacking principle, and relevance principle
Who introduced the notion of frame into linguistics and when?
empezar lección
Charles Fillmore in the middle of the 1970s
What is Fillmore's classic example used to introduce frames?
empezar lección
The commercial event frame, particularly the verb buy
What are the four components of the [BUY] frame?
empezar lección
BUYER, SELLER, GOODS, MONEY
In the sentence "David bought an old shirt from John for ten pounds," how are the frame components represented syntactically?
empezar lección
BUYER (David) as subject, GOODS (an old shirt) as direct object, SELLER (John) as first adverbial, MONEY (ten pounds) as second adverbial
What is meant by "syntactic perspective" in frame theory?
empezar lección
The assignment of syntactic roles to frame components, governed largely by verb choice
How do the verbs buy, sell, charge, and pay relate to the [COMMERCIAL EVENT] frame?
empezar lección
They all describe the same commercial event but from different perspectives
What perspective does the verb buy take in the commercial event frame?
empezar lección
BUYER's perspective, with BUYER and GOODS as subject and object
What perspective does the verb sell take in the commercial event frame?
empezar lección
SELLER's perspective, with SELLER and GOODS as subject and object
How does the frame approach go beyond the figure/ground approach?
empezar lección
It pays more attention to less prominent parts of sentences like adverbials
How did Fillmore's definition of frame evolve from 1975 to 1992?
empezar lección
From "system of linguistic choices associated with scenes" to "cognitive structures whose knowledge is presupposed for the concepts encoded by words"
What did Fillmore mean by "scenes" in his early definition of frames?
empezar lección
Situations, related to the cognitive linguistics notion of 'situation'
How are frames currently defined in cognitive linguistics?
empezar lección
Specific unified frameworks of knowledge or coherent schematizations of experience
What is the relationship between perspective and attention in frame theory?
empezar lección
Perspective depends on what attracts our attention; verbs direct attention to specific frame components
How does the frame approach differ from Langacker's Cognitive Grammar in terms of scope?
empezar lección
Frame approach addresses all sentence elements including indirect objects and adverbials, while Langacker focuses primarily on the two most prominent entities
In which discipline besides linguistics has the frame notion been applied?
empezar lección
Artificial intelligence
Who defined frames as "a data-structure for representing a stereotyped situation"?
empezar lección
Marvin Minsky
What knowledge is activated when the category PLANE is mentioned?
empezar lección
The [FLYING ON A PLANE] frame, including PILOT, FLIGHT ATTENDANT, LIFE VEST, SAFETY BELT, FIRST CLASS, ECONOMY CLASS, etc.
What is a script in the context of cognitive models?
empezar lección
Knowledge structures designed for frequently recurring event sequences
How do scripts differ from frames?
empezar lección
Scripts represent larger sequences of events connected by causal chains, while frames represent knowledge about specific situations
What are the three main stages of the [FLYING ON A PLANE] script?
empezar lección
Pre-flight stage, the flight (with pre-take-off, flight, and post-landing sub-stages), and post-flight stage
What are the four scenes in the [RESTAURANT] script?
empezar lección
Entering, ordering, eating, exiting
What are the entry conditions for the restaurant script?
empezar lección
Customer is hungry and has money
What are the props in the restaurant script?
empezar lección
Tables, menu, food, bill, money
What are the roles in the restaurant script?
empezar lección
Customer, waiter, cook, cashier, owner
Why do the definite articles in "the life vest" and "the flight attendant" sound natural in the plane story?
empezar lección
Because the [FLYING ON A PLANE] frame provides the necessary world knowledge that these items exist on a plane
What allows us to make the right inferences about "the life vest" and "the flight attendant"?
empezar lección
Our world knowledge activated by the [FLYING ON A PLANE] frame
How do frames and scripts help in understanding discourse?
empezar lección
They allow us to unconsciously fill in missing information and make necessary inferences
Why is the first John restaurant story understandable but the second one is not?
empezar lección
The first fits our internalized restaurant script, allowing us to fill in missing stages; the second doesn't correspond to script expectations
What happens when events in a story don't correspond to script expectations?
empezar lección
The events cannot be brought into a meaningful causal chain and the story seems incoherent
How does subchapter 5.2 extend the notion of frames from the previous section?
empezar lección
It extends frames to describe more general situations such as event chains linked by temporal sequences or causation
What is the main limitation of Fillmore's commercial event-frame mentioned in the text?
empezar lección
It is context- and culture-dependent, containing specific information about buying/selling practices that may not apply universally
Who proposed the universalist-cognitive approach to event-frames?
empezar lección
Talmy
What are the six cognitive components of a motion event-frame?
empezar lección
FIGURE, GROUND, PATH, MOTION, MANNER, CAUSE
What is Talmy's definition of an event-frame?
empezar lección
A set of conceptual elements and interrelationships that are evoked together or co-evoke each other
How are FIGURE, GROUND, and PATH illustrated in the balloon example?
empezar lección
Balloon as FIGURE, house as GROUND, the course through space as PATH
What is the relationship between motion and figure according to the text?
empezar lección
Motion can be conceived without a figure, but a figure cannot move without motion; static locative relations are a special case of zero-motion
What special case of motion includes static locative relations?
empezar lección
Zero-motion or locatedness with a zero-path
What does the MANNER component describe in motion events?
empezar lección
The way or manner of movement (e.g., flying vs. running vs. crawling)
What does the CAUSE component refer to in motion events?
empezar lección
The cause that makes the moving object start moving or stay in motion
What is windowing of attention?
empezar lección
The cognitive process of foregrounding certain portions of an event-frame
What is the reverse process of windowing?
empezar lección
Gapping (backgrounding conceptual material that is part of an event-frame)
What are the three positional types of path-windowing?
empezar lección
Initial, medial, and final windowing
How is path-windowing achieved linguistically?
empezar lección
By explicitly using linguistic expressions that refer to certain portions of the PATH
What are the three types of paths in motion events?
empezar lección
Open paths, closed paths, and fictive paths
What defines an open path?
empezar lección
A path whose beginning point and ending point are at different locations in space
What defines a closed path?
empezar lección
A path where the starting and end point coincide at the same location in space (circular)
Why is single initial windowing not possible for closed paths in the "I need the milk" example?
empezar lección
Because the initial portion alone doesn't provide enough information to ensure the whole motion event is realized as a closed path
What is the circular path in the milk example?
empezar lección
The person moves from the table to the refrigerator and back to the table
What are fictive paths?
empezar lección
Imaginary paths used to express static locative relations as involving motion
How does "My bike is across the street from the bakery" involve a fictive path?
empezar lección
The hearer constructs a mental path from the bakery (reference point) across the street to the bike's location
How does the order of linguistic constituents differ between real and fictive paths?
empezar lección
In real paths, the order follows the direction of the path; in fictive paths, the order may not follow the path direction (e.g., final portion first)
When can the main reference point be omitted in fictive path-windowing?
empezar lección
When its identity is generally provided by context or convention
How does Talmy's view of causation differ from traditional approaches?
empezar lección
He argues for a gradient of causativity with different degrees rather than a simple yes/no category
What are the three types of causation according to Talmy?
empezar lección
Event-causation, author-causation, agent-causation
What are the five subevents in "John broke the window with a stone"?
empezar lección
1) Agent intends to act, 2) Agent sets body in motion, 3) Intermediate subevent(s), 4) Penultimate subevent (immediate cause), 5) Final resulting subevent
Which stages are typically windowed in causal-chain event-frames?
empezar lección
The initiating agent (stage 1) and the final result (stage 5)
What is the most significant aspect in a causal-chain event-frame and why?
empezar lección
The penultimate event (stage 4) because it refers to the immediate cause of the final result
Which stage do by-clauses typically refer to in English?
empezar lección
The penultimate subevent (immediate cause)
What does Talmy's approach add to the analysis of frames compared to Fillmore's?
empezar lección
It widens investigation to adverbials and other less prominent parts of clause structure, and accounts for blocked complements, providing a comprehensive cognitive view
What two ways does subchapter 5.3 extend the discussion of event-frames?
empezar lección
It investigates differences in the expression of motion event-frames across languages, and shows that language-specific framing has consequences for narrative style
What are the six components of motion event-frames?
empezar lección
FIGURE, GROUND, MOTION, PATH, MANNER, CAUSE
What English sentence is used to illustrate cross-linguistic differences in motion event framing?
empezar lección
"Blériot flew across the Channel"
How is PATH expressed in English motion event descriptions?
empezar lección
By means of a particle (e.g., "across" in "flew across the Channel")
How is PATH expressed in French motion event descriptions?
empezar lección
Incorporated in the verb meaning (e.g., "traversa" in "Blériot traversa la Manche en avion")
How is MANNER expressed in English and German motion descriptions?
empezar lección
Incorporated in the verb (e.g., "rode" in "The boy rode out of the yard")
How is MANNER expressed in French and Spanish motion descriptions?
empezar lección
Added as a separate adverbial (e.g., "à cheval" in "Le garçon sortit à cheval de la cour")
What is a verb-framed language and which languages are examples?
empezar lección
A language where PATH is expressed in the verb; examples include French, Spanish, all Romance languages, Semitic languages (Arabic, Hebrew), Japanese
What is a satellite-framed language and which languages are examples?
empezar lección
A language where PATH is expressed in a satellite (particle); examples include English, German, all Indo-European languages except Romance, Finno-Ugric languages, Chinese
What is the relationship between PATH and MANNER expression in verb-framed vs satellite-framed languages?
empezar lección
In verb-framed languages, PATH is in the verb and MANNER is in an adverbial; in satellite-framed languages, MANNER is in the verb and PATH is in a satellite
According to Talmy, how can all languages of the world be categorized regarding motion event framing?
empezar lección
All languages can be categorized as either verb-framed or satellite-framed
What is the unified view of PATH and MANNER expression presented in Figure 5.19?
empezar lección
In English (satellite-framed), MANNER is in the verb and PATH is in a satellite; in Spanish (verb-framed), PATH is in the verb and MANNER is in an adverbial
What did Slobin's comparative study of novels examine?
empezar lección
Translations of English-language novels into Spanish and vice versa, focusing on descriptions of motion events
What were Slobin's main findings about MANNER expression in English-to-Spanish translations?
empezar lección
Spanish translators omit manner information about half of the time
What were Slobin's main findings about MANNER expression in Spanish-to-English translations?
empezar lección
English translators actually add manner to the Spanish original in almost a quarter of their translations
What two strategies do Spanish translators use when faced with English manner verbs?
empezar lección
Omission of manner information (leave-out strategy) or adding an adverbial clause
Why do English translators sometimes avoid using Romance cognates of Spanish verbs?
empezar lección
Because English words of Romance origin often have a ring of formality about them
What was the methodology of Slobin's Frog story study?
empezar lección
Elicited stories from Spanish and English speakers using the wordless picture story "Frog, Where Are You?" with 60 stories per language from different age groups
How many verb types did English narrators use in the Frog story compared to Spanish narrators?
empezar lección
English: 47 verb stems (123 with satellites); Spanish: 27 verb types
What is the main difference in PATH description between English and Spanish stories?
empezar lección
English narrators use more varied verbs and satellites for detailed PATH descriptions, while Spanish narrators use fewer verb types
What is an example of path-windowing from the English stories?
empezar lección
"The deer threw the boy over a cliff into a pond" (medial and final window on PATH)
How many examples of combined path-windowing were found in Spanish stories?
empezar lección
Only three examples where either an initial or medial window was combined with a final path window
How do English and Spanish narrators differ in describing the setting of motion events?
empezar lección
English incorporates setting in the motion event through path-windowing, resulting in dynamic description; Spanish describes setting separately in static clauses
What cognitive components are expressed in the sentence "He tips him off over a cliff into the water"?
empezar lección
AGENT, MOTION, FIGURE, PATH (with medial and final windows), CAUSE, MANNER, and setting information
How does the Spanish translation of "I climbed up the path over the cliffs towards the rest of the people" differ from the English original?
empezar lección
The Spanish uses three clauses instead of one, omits the vertical directionality (up) and the medial window (over the cliffs), and isolates setting details in separate relative clauses
What do Spanish translators sometimes omit to maintain a dynamic event description?
empezar lección
Locative detail and path-windowing information
Why are satellite-framed languages like English better suited for descriptions of MANNER and PATH?
empezar lección
Because MANNER is often incorporated in the verb meaning, and PATH/setting can be expressed in the same clause as the motion event by opening attentional windows
What is the typical narrative style difference between English and Spanish based on the studies?
empezar lección
English narratives are more dynamic with detailed MANNER and PATH descriptions; Spanish narratives are more static and step-by-step
What overall conclusion does the subchapter reach about the relationship between language-specific framing and narrative style?
empezar lección
Language-specific framing of motion events has far-reaching consequences for the narrative style typical of different languages
What is the central claim of Construction Grammar regarding frames and syntax?
empezar lección
That frames and possible perspectives are reflected linguistically in the syntax of clauses, or that syntactic patterns may be associated with conceptual frame structure
What are the six components of a motion event-frame?
empezar lección
MOTION, FIGURE, PATH, GROUND, MANNER, CAUSE
What sentence illustrates the caused-motion event-frame?
empezar lección
"The draught blew the pencil off the table"
What is the relationship between frame components and syntactic constituents in the caused-motion construction?
empezar lección
There is a very close correspondence: CAUSE → Subject, MOTION → Verb, FIGURE → Object, PATH/GROUND → Adverbial
What is the main idea behind Construction Grammar's view of syntactic patterns?
empezar lección
Syntactic patterns themselves may have a share in encoding particular types of experience, and constructions are stored in long-term memory with both their form and meaning
What is Goldberg's argument for constructional meaning?
empezar lección
We identify caused-motion meaning not only in sentences with fitting verbal meanings, but also with verbs that don't suggest caused-motion meaning by themselves
What example does Goldberg use to demonstrate that constructional meaning is independent of verb meaning?
empezar lección
"Frank sneezed the tissue off the table" (where "sneeze" is intransitive and doesn't suggest caused-motion)
How is "Frank sneezed the tissue off the table" interpreted despite the verb "sneeze"?
empezar lección
As caused motion: 'Frank sneezed and thus caused the tissue to be swept off the table'
What do examples like "Barnes played him into trouble" show about constructional meaning?
empezar lección
The goal-orientation is derived from the construction as a whole, not from the verb meaning
How do transitive-causative verbs like "sit" and "stand" relate to the caused-motion construction?
empezar lección
Their transitive use can be explained through the caused-motion construction, rather than as a special sense distinct from their intransitive meaning
What are the three key claims about constructions made in the text?
empezar lección
1) Close correspondence between conceptual structures and syntactic structures, 2) Constructions may be stored in long-term memory like frames, 3) Constructions may have meanings independent of lexical items
What does it mean that constructions are pairings of forms and meanings?
empezar lección
Like words, constructions are pairings where the form automatically evokes the meaning and vice versa
What is the significance of constructions being stored in long-term memory like words?
empezar lección
It means we don't generate constructions on the fly but retrieve them as whole units, with their syntactic make-up and associated scene/event knowledge
What are the three major argument-structure constructions discussed?
empezar lección
Caused-motion construction, cause-receive construction (ditransitive), resultative construction (cause-become)
What basic experience and clause structure characterize the caused-motion construction?
empezar lección
Someone causing something else to move; Subject–Verb–Object–Adverbial (SVOA)
What basic experience and clause structure characterize the cause-receive construction?
empezar lección
Someone causing someone else to receive something; Subject–Verb–Objectind–Objectdir (SVOO)
What basic experience and clause structure characterize the resultative construction?
empezar lección
Someone causing something to change state; Subject–Verb–Object–Object complement (SVOCO)
What do the three argument-structure constructions share in common?
empezar lección
They join basic human experiences with basic syntactic clause patterns
Are constructions polysemous according to the text?
empezar lección
Yes, like lexemes, constructions can have a range of related meanings
What are the five semantic variants of the caused-motion construction shown in Figure 5.23?
empezar lección
a) X causes Y to move Z (central sense), b) X causes Y to move Z (motion not strictly entailed), c) X enables Y to move Z, d) X helps Y to move Z, e) X prevents Y from moving from Z
What is the shell-content construction?
empezar lección
A construction combining an abstract noun and dependent clause or infinitive, where the dependent clause is either directly attached or linked by BE
What is the cognitive-pragmatic function of the shell-content construction?
empezar lección
To make a whole proposition available as a noun-like concept (reification) and present it under a certain perspective
What is a shell noun and what does it do?
empezar lección
An abstract noun (fact, aim, chance, problem, etc.) that serves as a container or 'shell' for the information in the dependent clause
What are the two traditional approaches to idioms in linguistics?
empezar lección
Lexicological (multi-word items with non-compositional meaning) and syntactic (structural exceptions not covered by regular syntactic rules)
How do Fillmore, Kay & O'Connor view formal idioms?
empezar lección
As syntactic patterns dedicated to semantic and pragmatic purposes not knowable from their form alone
What are the specific characteristics of the let-alone construction?
empezar lección
Allows fragments, requires juxtaposed elements to represent points on a scale, assumes scales are feasible for evaluation
Why are formal idioms considered productive despite their irregularity?
empezar lección
They serve as syntactic models for new sentences and share specific pragmatic functions
How does viewing constructions as idioms revolutionize our model of syntax?
empezar lección
It means syntax is not just rule-governed but includes stored patterns, and we can do away with traditional syntactic rules
What three types of knowledge do constructions store according to the text?
empezar lección
Conceptual-semantic, syntactic, and pragmatic knowledge
What does Croft's statement "The constructional tail has come to wag the syntactic dog" mean?
empezar lección
Constructions, not traditional syntactic rules, are now seen as the primary generators of sentences
What fields outside linguistics have applied conceptual blending theory?
empezar lección
Cognitive psychology, mathematics, computing, musicology, archaeology
What types of linguistic phenomena does the subchapter apply blending analysis to?
empezar lección
Lexical, grammatical, and pragmatic phenomena
What are examples of morphological blends mentioned in the text?
empezar lección
smog, brunch, motel, infotainment
How does the blending analysis of smog, brunch, and motel differ from infotainment?
empezar lección
For smog, brunch, motel, the blending process is historical and lexicalized; for infotainment, the emergent structure is open-ended and not conclusively definable
Why do blends like swimsation and sportianity fail to become conventionalized?
empezar lección
The cross-space mappings are not vital (not identity, space, time, cause-effect, or part-whole relations), so composition and completion don't apply, and compression doesn't produce a coherent emergent structure
What is the blending analysis of the ad-hoc blend Ballacktisch?
empezar lección
It involves input spaces for Ballack (soccer player, Bayern Munich) and Real (soccer team, Madrid, "galactic/outstanding"), with cross-space mappings of identity and space, compressing to an emergent structure suggesting Ballack is joining Real Madrid
What are the input spaces in the Ballacktisch blend?
empezar lección
Input space 1: Ballack space (Ballack as soccer player, Bayern Munich); Input space 2: Real space (Real as soccer team, Madrid, with blended property 'galactic/outstanding')
What is the blended property in the Ballacktisch example?
empezar lección
'galactic/outstanding'
What vital relations are compressed in the Ballacktisch blend?
empezar lección
Identity (between people and their roles as soccer players) and space (between locations Munich and Madrid)
What is the emergent structure of the Ballacktisch blend?
empezar lección
Ballack can be regarded as galactic/outstanding and thus eligible for Real Madrid
How can compounds be understood as conceptual blends?
empezar lección
They involve input spaces for each constituent, with emergent structure in the blended space that integrates core information from the input spaces
What is the blending analysis of a compositional compound like apple juice?
empezar lección
Input spaces: 'apple space' and 'juice space'; emergent structure integrates core information from apple space into juice space
What extra attributes does the compound wheelchair have beyond its constituents?
empezar lección
Attributes related to hospitals or invalidity, arising from blending with additional input spaces
What are the four possible emergent structures for cherry jeans?
empezar lección
Cherry red jeans (color property), jeans printed with cherry pattern (shape property), jeans soiled by cherry juice stains (cause-effect), jeans worn for cherry picking (cause-effect)
What determines which interpretation of cherry jeans is most likely?
empezar lección
The cross-space mapping of identity between the color property of cherry space and jeans space, projecting both into the blended space
What are prop words in acronym formation?
empezar lección
Existing English words used as phonological models for acronyms pronounced as natural words
How does the acronym CARE demonstrate conceptual blending?
empezar lección
Input spaces: CARE meaning (Cooperative American Relief to Europe) and the word "care"; cross-space mapping: cause-effect relation between caring attitude and execution of intention
What input spaces are involved in the PISA acronym blend?
empezar lección
Input space 1: PISA test space (educational achievement testing); Input space 2: Pisa tower space (leaning tower of Pisa as hallmark of European culture)
What cross-space mapping is assumed in the PISA blend?
empezar lección
Cause-effect relation between educational achievement (cause) and cultural reputation of architectural heritage (effect)
What is the emergent structure of the PISA blend?
empezar lección
Good PISA test results maintain cultural heritage, but education may be off course like the leaning tower
What types of mental spaces are typically involved in word-formation blends?
empezar lección
Most are conceptualized as states or situations, though some involve events with actions and participant roles
What event schemas are in input space 1 of the sneezing blend?
empezar lección
Causing event (Frank sneezed) and effected event (the tissue fell off the table)
What event schema is in input space 2 of the sneezing blend?
empezar lección
Caused-motion event (Frank pushed the tissue off the table)
How do counterfactual sentences relate to conceptual blending?
empezar lección
They involve two different worlds (factual and counterfactual) that can be analyzed as input spaces in a blend
What input spaces are involved in the "If I were you" blend?
empezar lección
Input space 1: speech event space (speaker, hearer, advice); Input space 2: decision-making space (hearer as agent deciding on job application)
What is the effect of the cross-space identity mapping in counterfactuals?
empezar lección
The speaker is mapped onto the hearer slot, so the blend looks at the hearer's dilemma from the speaker's point of view, creating a patronizing tone
What are space builders and what do they do?
empezar lección
Grammatical expressions that either open up a new space or shift focus to an existing space (e.g., once upon a time, in that story, in the movie)
What does the subchapter conclude about the capabilities of blending analysis?
empezar lección
Blending analysis can describe both stock examples of lexicalized word-formations or entrenched constructions and more marginal examples, extending the field of linguistic research
What text types does subchapter 6.3 focus on for conceptual blending analysis?
empezar lección
Advertising texts, riddles, and jokes
Why are advertising texts, riddles, and jokes particularly interesting for conceptual blending analysis?
empezar lección
Because conceptual blending takes on a special form and achieves a special effect in these text types
What basic distinction did Roland Barthes make regarding text/picture relationships in advertising?
empezar lección
Anchorage (text provides disambiguation and deictic support for the picture) vs relay (text and image standing in a complementary relationship)
Which type of text/picture relationship does the subchapter focus on and why?
empezar lección
Relay, because it promises more interesting results
What specific advertisement is analyzed in the text?
empezar lección
Pantene shampoo and conditioner ad from Marie Claire (January 2000)
What are the two input spaces in the Pantene advertisement blend?
empezar lección
Lovers space (picture-based) and Pantene space (based on both pictures and text)
What cross-space identity mappings are used in the Pantene ad?
empezar lección
Identity between the two lovers and the two products, and between their spatial relations (close to each other, facing each other)
What emergent structure is created in the Pantene ad's blended space?
empezar lección
The prototypical interaction of the lovers is projected onto the relationship of the hair-care products, with the products as agents working together
What associations does the SETTING in the lovers space evoke?
empezar lección
Nature, freshness, purity, youth, and memories of a romantic meeting
How is the SETTING of the lovers space related to the PURPOSE of the Pantene space?
empezar lección
Through a forced cross-space mapping (identity or cause-effect) that is forced upon the reader by the ad's design
What headline is used in the Pantene ad and what does it suggest?
empezar lección
"Some things just work better together" - suggests that the shampoo and conditioner work better together, like the lovers
How do advertisers treat the indeterminacy of the emergent structure in ads like Pantene?
empezar lección
They exploit and even force the indeterminacy upon the reader, but hide the indeterminacy rather than lay it open
What riddle do Fauconnier and Turner use as a prime example of conceptual blending?
empezar lección
The Buddhist monk riddle
What is the scenario described in the Buddhist monk riddle?
empezar lección
A Buddhist monk begins at dawn walking up a mountain, reaches the top at sunset, meditates for several days, then walks back down at dawn and reaches the foot at sunset
What is the question asked in the Buddhist monk riddle?
empezar lección
Is there a place on the path that the monk occupies at the same hour of the day on the two separate journeys?
How does the blending approach solve the Buddhist monk riddle?
empezar lección
By imagining the monk walking up and down the mountain on the same day, creating a cross-space identity relation where he 'meets himself'
What cross-space relations are involved in the Buddhist monk blend?
empezar lección
Identity (the monk), place (the path), and time (the hour)
What is compressed in the Buddhist monk blend?
empezar lección
The person of the monk and the path are unified; the days of the two journeys are compressed, but not the hour of the imaginary meeting
What remains vague in the emergent structure of the Buddhist monk blend?
empezar lección
The exact position of the imaginary meeting point
What does the Buddhist monk riddle demonstrate about conceptual blending?
empezar lección
That conceptual blending can be a deliberately chosen problem-solving strategy, not just an unconscious process
What principle from Arthur Koestler's work is relevant for understanding jokes through blending?
empezar lección
The principle that jokes involve perceiving a situation or idea L in two self-consistent but habitually incompatible frames of reference M1 and M2
What child's joke is analyzed in the text?
empezar lección
Mother: "Why were you sent home early, Mary?" Mary: "Well, Mum, the boy next to me was smoking." Mother: "But if he was smoking, why were you sent home?" Mary: "I set him on fire."
What are the two input spaces in the Mary joke blend?
empezar lección
Cigarette-smoking space and setting-on-fire space
What encyclopaedic knowledge is included in input space 1 of the Mary joke?
empezar lección
That smoking is a common violation of school rules
What encyclopaedic knowledge is included in input space 2 of the Mary joke?
empezar lección
That burning objects smoke
What cross-space mappings are established in the Mary joke blend?
empezar lección
Identity (boy as AGENT in space 1 and PATIENT in space 2), cause-effect (setting fire ↔ smoking), and scale of offence
What role changes occur during compression in the Mary joke?
empezar lección
The AGENT role is superseded by the PATIENT role, while the BYSTANDER role is elevated to AGENT
What creates the humorous effect in the Mary joke?
empezar lección
The obvious incompatibility emerging in the structure of the blended space, particularly between the two actions (producing smoke by setting on fire vs smoking cigarettes)
How does the Mary joke comply with the unpacking principle?
empezar lección
It permits the unraveling of the development of the joke and invites the audience to take delight in Mary's verbal skills
What do advertising texts, riddles, and jokes share regarding their use of blending?
empezar lección
They all exploit the online quality of the emergent structure of the blend, though in different ways
What text types does subchapter 6.3 focus on for conceptual blending analysis?
empezar lección
Advertising texts, riddles, and jokes
Why are advertising texts, riddles, and jokes particularly interesting for conceptual blending analysis?
empezar lección
Because conceptual blending takes on a special form and achieves a special effect in these text types
What basic distinction did Roland Barthes make regarding text/picture relationships in advertising?
empezar lección
Anchorage (text provides disambiguation and deictic support for the picture) vs relay (text and image standing in a complementary relationship)
Which type of text/picture relationship does the subchapter focus on and why?
empezar lección
Relay, because it promises more interesting results
What specific advertisement is analyzed in the text?
empezar lección
Pantene shampoo and conditioner ad from Marie Claire (January 2000)
What are the two input spaces in the Pantene advertisement blend?
empezar lección
Lovers space (picture-based) and Pantene space (based on both pictures and text)
What cross-space identity mappings are used in the Pantene ad?
empezar lección
Identity between the two lovers and the two products, and between their spatial relations (close to each other, facing each other)
What emergent structure is created in the Pantene ad's blended space?
empezar lección
The prototypical interaction of the lovers is projected onto the relationship of the hair-care products, with the products as agents working together
What associations does the SETTING in the lovers space evoke?
empezar lección
Nature, freshness, purity, youth, and memories of a romantic meeting
How is the SETTING of the lovers space related to the PURPOSE of the Pantene space?
empezar lección
Through a forced cross-space mapping (identity or cause-effect) that is forced upon the reader by the ad's design
What headline is used in the Pantene ad and what does it suggest?
empezar lección
"Some things just work better together" - suggests that the shampoo and conditioner work better together, like the lovers
How do advertisers treat the indeterminacy of the emergent structure in ads like Pantene?
empezar lección
They exploit and even force the indeterminacy upon the reader, but hide the indeterminacy rather than lay it open
What riddle do Fauconnier and Turner use as a prime example of conceptual blending?
empezar lección
The Buddhist monk riddle
What is the scenario described in the Buddhist monk riddle?
empezar lección
A Buddhist monk begins at dawn walking up a mountain, reaches the top at sunset, meditates for several days, then walks back down at dawn and reaches the foot at sunset
What is the question asked in the Buddhist monk riddle?
empezar lección
Is there a place on the path that the monk occupies at the same hour of the day on the two separate journeys?
How does the blending approach solve the Buddhist monk riddle?
empezar lección
By imagining the monk walking up and down the mountain on the same day, creating a cross-space identity relation where he 'meets himself'
What cross-space relations are involved in the Buddhist monk blend?
empezar lección
Identity (the monk), place (the path), and time (the hour)
What is compressed in the Buddhist monk blend?
empezar lección
The person of the monk and the path are unified; the days of the two journeys are compressed, but not the hour of the imaginary meeting
What remains vague in the emergent structure of the Buddhist monk blend?
empezar lección
The exact position of the imaginary meeting point
What does the Buddhist monk riddle demonstrate about conceptual blending?
empezar lección
That conceptual blending can be a deliberately chosen problem-solving strategy, not just an unconscious process
What principle from Arthur Koestler's work is relevant for understanding jokes through blending?
empezar lección
The principle that jokes involve perceiving a situation or idea L in two self-consistent but habitually incompatible frames of reference M1 and M2
What child's joke is analyzed in the text?
empezar lección
Mother: "Why were you sent home early, Mary?" Mary: "Well, Mum, the boy next to me was smoking." Mother: "But if he was smoking, why were you sent home?" Mary: "I set him on fire."
What are the two input spaces in the Mary joke blend?
empezar lección
Cigarette-smoking space and setting-on-fire space
What encyclopaedic knowledge is included in input space 1 of the Mary joke?
empezar lección
That smoking is a common violation of school rules
What encyclopaedic knowledge is included in input space 2 of the Mary joke?
empezar lección
That burning objects smoke
What cross-space mappings are established in the Mary joke blend?
empezar lección
Identity (boy as AGENT in space 1 and PATIENT in space 2), cause-effect (setting fire ↔ smoking), and scale of offence
What role changes occur during compression in the Mary joke?
empezar lección
The AGENT role is superseded by the PATIENT role, while the BYSTANDER role is elevated to AGENT
What creates the humorous effect in the Mary joke?
empezar lección
The obvious incompatibility emerging in the structure of the blended space, particularly between the two actions (producing smoke by setting on fire vs smoking cigarettes)
How does the Mary joke comply with the unpacking principle?
empezar lección
It permits the unraveling of the development of the joke and invites the audience to take delight in Mary's verbal skills
What do advertising texts, riddles, and jokes share regarding their use of blending?
empezar lección
They all exploit the online quality of the emergent structure of the blend, though in different ways
Where did the notion of relevance as a governing principle of conceptual blending originate?
empezar lección
It was proposed as one of the governing principles of conceptual blending by Fauconnier and Turner
Who gave the pragmatic principle of relevance a cognitive turn?
empezar lección
Sperber and Wilson (1995)
What is the purpose of discussing Relevance Theory in this subchapter?
empezar lección
To select and simplify aspects akin to cognitive-linguistic thinking from which cognitive linguistics might benefit
What controls human understanding of verbal and non-verbal communicative events?
empezar lección
The search for relevance
What dialogue example illustrates the search for relevance?
empezar lección
Peter: "Do you want some coffee?" Mary: "Coffee would keep me awake."
What is a cognitive environment according to Sperber and Wilson?
empezar lección
The set of all assumptions that are manifest to individuals because they can perceive them in their physical environment or infer them using cognitive abilities like memory and reasoning
What three types of assumptions make up a cognitive environment?
empezar lección
Assumptions that are stored in memory, currently perceived, or currently inferred
What is ostensive-inferential behaviour?
empezar lección
What is said together with gestures, facial expression, and other non-verbal cues
How does ostensive-inferential behaviour relate to figure/ground segregation?
empezar lección
The ostensive-inferential stimulus stands out as figure from the conceptual background of all potential assumptions that are not explicitly encoded
What non-linguistic example illustrates ostensive behaviour?
empezar lección
Peter leaning back on a park bench to draw Mary's attention to something
What two intentions are conveyed by ostensive-inferential behaviour?
empezar lección
The informative intention (to inform of something) and the communicative intention (to inform of the informative intention)
What example illustrates the evaluation of cognitive effects and processing effort?
empezar lección
Mary seeing an ice-cream vendor, a stroller, and William approaching on the park bench
What are the two extent conditions of relevance according to Sperber and Wilson?
empezar lección
Condition 1: An assumption is relevant to the extent that positive cognitive effects achieved when optimally processed are large; Condition 2: An assumption is relevant to the extent that the effort required to achieve these effects is small
How is cognitive efficiency defined?
empezar lección
An economic use of processing resources
What is the relationship between cognitive efficiency and cognitive economy?
empezar lección
Sperber and Wilson's cognitive efficiency is more comprehensive than Rosch's cognitive economy, but they share the principle of maximizing information with minimal effort
What cognitive-linguistic concepts could benefit from applying cognitive efficiency?
empezar lección
Gestalt/holistic perception, metonymies, and meaningful syntactic constructions
How do Relevance Theory and Conceptual-Blending Theory both address online cognitive processing?
empezar lección
Relevance Theory addresses it through assumptions sparked by ostensive acts; Conceptual-Blending Theory addresses it through mental input spaces, cognitive models, and vital relations
What utterance example is used to illustrate inferential assumptions?
empezar lección
Mary's utterance "It will get cold"
What are sets {A} and {I} in the "It will get cold" example?
empezar lección
Set {A}: preparative assumptions about Mary's physical presence and utterance; Set {I}: central assumptions about Mary's intentions and the meaning of her utterance
What is the difference between an implicature and an explicature?
empezar lección
Implicatures are inferred meanings that go beyond what is said; explicatures are explicit elaborations of what is said
What are the vital relations in Conceptual-Blending Theory?
empezar lección
Identity, space, time, property, cause-effect, and part-whole
How does Relevance Theory approach cognitive processing compared to Conceptual-Blending Theory?
empezar lección
Relevance Theory uses a systematic and logical approach with assumptions; Conceptual-Blending Theory uses a richer but vaguer approach with mental spaces and vital relations
What is the main difference in how the two theories view the relationship between language and general cognition?
empezar lección
Relevance Theory postulates a separate inferential module loosely related to general cognition; Conceptual-Blending Theory favours a holistic view where language structure and use are intertwined with general cognitive abilities
What is the "anything goes" criticism of Conceptual-Blending Theory?
empezar lección
That vital relations and compression lack a coherent system and hierarchy, leading to the criticism that anything can be blended
What are the governing principles of conceptual blending mentioned?
empezar lección
Relevance, topology, integration, unpacking
What are the potential benefits of cooperation between Relevance Theory and Conceptual-Blending Theory?
empezar lección
Vital relations and compression could benefit from Relevance Theory's systematic organization; Relevance Theory could overcome its disregard of interactional components; Relevance Theory could enrich its explanations with more 'soft' cognition
What three suggestions for developing cognitive linguistics are provided?
empezar lección
Extend idealized cognitive models to individualized cognitive environments; give figure/ground a speaker- and hearer-oriented interpretation; widen use of cognitive economy and efficiency
How should idealized cognitive models be extended according to the text?
empezar lección
To individualized cognitive environments that differ from person to person and situation to situation
What other cognitive-linguistic concepts should incorporate cognitive economy and efficiency?
empezar lección
Gestalt/holistic perception, metonymies, and meaningful syntactic constructions

Debes iniciar sesión para poder comentar.