"the ubiquity of nonce sense" "He tried to teapot a policeman" (Clark, 1983)
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The unboundedness of nonce sense
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Semantic representations beyond the "core" language network
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Action verbs activate somatotopic regions of (pre)motor cortex
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Action words activate left-hemisphere circuits involved action observation and action execution.
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The Body-Specificity Hypothesis
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Does word meaning depend on the specifics of the language user's body?
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The motor component of action verb understanding is body-specific.
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Changing the syntactic context
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OTHERS' ACTIONS (HE/SHE THROWS)
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Creating meaning of indirect requests activates Motor, Theory of Mind areas
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The ad hoc use of scientific constructs
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CC&Ms in context
Description:
Explore a 35-minute lecture by Daniel Casasanto, Associate Professor of Psychology and Human Development at Cornell University, on the ad hoc construction of meaning. Delve into topics such as Plato's Aviary, ad hoc concepts and categories, the ubiquity of nonce sense, and the Body-Specificity Hypothesis. Examine how action verbs activate somatotopic regions of the brain and how word meaning depends on the language user's body. Investigate the motor component of action verb understanding and the creation of meaning in indirect requests. Gain insights into the ad hoc use of scientific constructs and the role of context in cognitive linguistics.
Daniel Casasanto: The Ad Hoc Construction of Meaning