4.2 Article

Thematic and other semantic relations central to abstract (and concrete) concepts

Journal

PSYCHOLOGICAL RESEARCH-PSYCHOLOGISCHE FORSCHUNG
Volume 86, Issue 8, Pages 2399-2416

Publisher

SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s00426-021-01484-8

Keywords

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Funding

  1. University of Western Ontario BrainsCAN postdoctoral fellowship
  2. Natural Science and Engineering Discovery Grant [05652]

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This article discusses the types of meaningful relations underlying abstract concepts and emphasizes the importance of linguistic and real-world context in understanding words and events. By exploring thematic and semantic relations, a better understanding of abstract concepts can be achieved.
In this article, we discuss multiple types of meaningful (semantic) relations underlying abstract (as compared to concrete) concepts. We adopt the viewpoint that words act as cues to meaning (Elman in Ment Lexicon 6(1):1-34, 2011; Lupyan and Lewis in Lang Cogn Neurosci 34(10):1319-1337, 2019), which is dependent on the dynamic contents of a comprehender's mental model of the situation. This view foregrounds the importance of both linguistic and real-world context as individuals make sense of words, flexibly access relevant knowledge, and understand described events and situations. We discuss theories of, and experimental work on, abstract concepts through the lens of the importance of thematic and other semantic relations. We then tie these findings to the sentence processing literature in which such meaningful relations within sentential contexts are often experimentally manipulated. In this literature, some specific classes/types of abstract words have been studied, although not comprehensively, and with limited connection to the literature on knowledge underlying abstract concepts reviewed herein. We conclude by arguing that the ways in which humans understand relatively more abstract concepts, in particular, can be informed by the careful study of words presented not in isolation, but rather in situational and linguistic contexts, and as a function of individual differences in knowledge, goals, and beliefs.

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