Intentionally cross posted..No apologies!
This is relevant to both communities and highly relevant to the work we are doing in modeling depression & treatment response.
Not sure how we manage this discussion - that's probably a totally different thread topic :-) -quick reply to that, ok, but that isn't where I want to see the cross post go.
This is a fascinating observation about relationships, and raises interesting questions about whether and how well we can capture context and culture in our current mapping schemes.
Thanks John!
Joanne
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Begin forwarded message:
The subject line of this note is the title of an article aboutrelationships between the verbs that children learn by the age of 3and the body parts that are involved in the actions of those verbs.(See the URL and abstract at the end of this note.)Some excerpts from the article:The body stands between the mind and the world and thus the properties
of the body itself may shape knowledge...
Many common verbs — for example, kiss, hug, kick — seem to be about actions
performed by specific body parts. Further, imaging studies show that
merely hearing a verb (e.g., kick) activates the cortical motor areas
relevant to moving the appropriate body part (e.g., leg and foot) ...
Behavioral studies also suggest a connection between verbs and movements
by particular parts of the body. For example, moving the arm away from
the body slows judgment about the sentence, “Open the drawer” (an action
involving the movement of the arm toward the body)... Such results
suggest that the on-line processing of verb meanings may involve or
interact with some of the same processes that generate bodilyaction...
The overall acquisition pattern—from relatively many mouth verbs, to
more hand verbs, to less bodily defined verbs—was unexpected and
tantalizing in its similarity to traditional Piagetian (Piaget, 1953)
descriptions of the developmental course of sensory-motor development
as infants first explore relations in their world.
This study is one of many that show how the semantics of naturallanguage is grounded in the neural mechanisms of perception and action.John Sowa______________________________________________________________________Source: http://csjarchive.cogsci.rpi.edu/2008v32/7/HCOG_A_302167_O.pdfBody Parts and Early-Learned VerbsJosita Maouene, Shohei Hidaka, Linda B. SmithAbstract.This article reports the structure of associations among 101 commonverbs and body parts. The verbs are those typically learned by childrenlearning English prior to 3 years of age. In a free association task,50 adults were asked to provide the single body part that came to mindwhen they thought of each verb. Analyses reveal highly systematic andstructured patterns of associations that are also related to thenormative age of acquisition of the verbs showing a progressionfrom verbs associated with actions by the mouth, to verbs stronglyassociated with actions by hand and arm, to verbs not so stronglyassociated with any one body part. The results have implicationsfor proposals about embodied verb meaning and also for processesof early verb learning._________________________________________________________________Message Archives: http://ontolog.cim3.net/forum/ontolog-forum/ Config Subscr: http://ontolog.cim3.net/mailman/listinfo/ontolog-forum/ Unsubscribe: mailto:ontolog-forum-leave@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxShared Files: http://ontolog.cim3.net/file/Community Wiki: http://ontolog.cim3.net/wiki/ To join: http://ontolog.cim3.net/cgi-bin/wiki.pl?WikiHomePage#nid1J
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