[lingtalks] reminder: Linguistics Colloquium on January 23

Katie McGee kmcgee at ling.ucsd.edu
Sun Jan 22 12:42:50 PST 2006


Just a friendly reminder that Soonja Choi will be speaking on Monday, January 23rd.

When:  2-3:30 pm
Where:  TV Studio (2nd floor of McGill)
Abstract below...
 
Language-Specific Input on Spatial Cognition

 

San Diego State University

Soonja Choi

 

     Languages differ significantly in the way they categorize spatial relations.  For example, English makes a distinction between containment (e.g. putting an apple IN a bowl) and support (e.g. putting a cup ON a table), whereas Korean makes a distinction between loose fit and tight fit regardless of containment and support.  In Korean, the verb KKITA 'tight fit or interlock' is used for both a tight-fit containment relation such as 'putting a book tightly in its box-shaped cover' and a tight-fit support relation such as 'putting a Lego piece tightly onto another'.

The extensiveness of cross-linguistic differences in spatial semantic categorization found in recent studies on adult grammars raises questions about when and how children acquire the spatial semantic system of their native language, and more generally, about the relationship between language and cognition in children and adults.  In this talk, I present studies that examine language-specific input and spatial cognition in learners (and adult speakers) of English and Korean.  In particular, I examine whether and to what extent language-specific semantics can influence nonlinguistic spatial cognition.  Overall, my studies show that there is a dynamic interaction between language and cognition from a very early age and that language starts to influence spatial cognition as children use spatial words productively.  However, some aspects of spatial cognition persist regardless of language-specific input.

 

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