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The Effect of Motion Type and Modality in Word Learning in English

Emerson, Samantha N
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Abstract

Speakers of satellite-framed languages (S-languages such as English) express manner more frequently than speakers of verb-framed languages (V-languages such as Spanish) because S-languages use "satellite" phrases to encode path, leaving the verb free to encode manner (Talmy, 1985, Slobin, 2004). Gestures have also been shown to follow these cross-linguistic differences. While numerous studies have examined the effect of manner and path expressions on cognition cross-linguistically and in V-languages, less is known about these effects within S-languages. The current study examines encoding of path and manner events in English using a novel word-learning paradigm. Our results show that English speakers are less accurate at identifying words for manner than path—after controlling for the effects of learning and similarity of event pairs—regardless of the modality of learning (speech only vs. speech+gesture). Overall, our results suggest a path advantage in word learning even for S-language speakers.

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Date
2013-04-11
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Research Projects
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Keywords
Talmy’s typology, Motion events, Thinking for Speaking, Word learning, Gestures
Citation
Emerson, Samantha N. "The Effect of Motion Type and Modality in Word Learning in English." 2013. Thesis, Georgia State University. https://doi.org/10.57709/4076748
Embargo Lift Date
2013-04-26
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