Concepts, Frames and Cascades in Semantics, Cognition and Ontology.

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Superior document:Language, Cognition, and Mind Series ; v.7
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Place / Publishing House:Cham : : Springer International Publishing AG,, 2021.
{copy}2021.
Year of Publication:2021
Edition:1st ed.
Language:English
Series:Language, Cognition, and Mind Series
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spelling Löbner, Sebastian.
Concepts, Frames and Cascades in Semantics, Cognition and Ontology.
1st ed.
Cham : Springer International Publishing AG, 2021.
{copy}2021.
1 online resource (475 pages)
text txt rdacontent
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Language, Cognition, and Mind Series ; v.7
Intro -- Preface -- Contents -- Introduction -- 1 Cognitive Structures in Natural Language Semantics -- 2 Cognitive Structures in Philosophy -- 3 Cognitive Structures in Psychology -- 4 Summaries -- 4.1 Part I Pushing the Boundaries of Formal Semantics -- 4.2 Part II Concept Theory -- 4.3 Part III Conceptualizing Eventualities -- 4.4 Part IV Prototypes and Probabilities -- 4.5 Part V Cognition and Psychology -- References -- Pushing the Boundaries of Formal Semantics -- A Compositional Pluralist Semantics for Extensional and Attitude Verbs -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Accounts of Truth-Conditional and Attitude Content -- 2.1 The Relation Between Truth-Conditional and Attitude Content -- 2.2 Attempts at (Re-)Connecting Truth-Conditional and Attitude Content -- 2.3 Desiderata for an Account of Truth-Conditional and Attitude Content -- 3 Integrated Semantics -- 3.1 Centered Informational Situations -- 3.2 The Integrated Content of Sentences -- 3.3 The Interpretation of Proper Names -- 4 The Compositional Interpretation of VPs -- 5 Extensional and Attitude Verbs in IS -- 5.1 The Interpretation of Extensional Verbs -- 5.2 The Interpretation of Attitude Verbs -- 5.3 Attitudinal Embeddings of Extensional Verbs -- 6 Conclusion and Future Work -- References -- Counting Possible Configurations -- 1 Introduction -- 2 The Problem with Configurations -- 3 An Individual Concept Analysis -- 4 Generalizing the Individual Concept Analysis -- 4.1 Is Everything an Individual Concept? -- 4.2 Coercion to Constituting Parts -- 4.3 Joining and Counting Individual Concepts -- 4.4 Collective and Cumulative Interpretations -- 5 The Property Analysis -- 6 Conclusion -- References -- Structure and Ontology in Nonlocal Readings of Adjectives -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Nonlocal Readings of Adjectives -- 2.1 On `Occasional' -- 2.2 Returning to `Average' -- 2.3 Wrong.
2.4 `Whole' and `Entire' -- 2.5 Epistemic Adjectives -- 2.6 Same and Different -- 2.7 Modal Superlatives: `Possible' and Its Kin -- 2.8 Miscellaneous Obscurities and Novelties -- 3 Three Classes of Nonlocal Readings -- 4 Some Background -- 4.1 Incorporation -- 4.2 Structure Versus Ontology: The First Step -- 4.3 The Kind Analysis of `Occasional' -- 5 The Modular Strategy -- 5.1 Determiner-Like Adjectives -- 5.2 Determiners That Work -- 5.3 Determiners That Don't Work -- 5.4 A Word About `Occasional' -- 5.5 The Weak Quantifier Class -- 5.6 Summary -- 6 Taking Stock -- 6.1 Could Things Be so Simple? -- 6.2 Kinds and Concepts -- 7 Final Remarks -- References -- Concept Theory -- How Can Semantics Avoid the Troubles with the Analytic/Synthetic Distinction? -- 1 Semantics and the Architecture of Cognition -- 2 The Analytic/Synthetic Distinction and Semantic Theories -- 2.1 Causatives -- 2.2 Indeterminacy (or "Coercion") -- 3 Alternative: Atomism and Inferences -- 3.1 Back to Causatives -- 3.2 Back to "Coercion" -- 3.3 Conclusion: Atomic Concepts and Inferences -- References -- Linguistic Relativity and Flexibility of Mental Representations: Color Terms in a Frame Based Analysis -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Color Terms and Whorfianism: Some Coordinates -- 2.1 Universalism, ``deep'' and ``shallow'' Whorfianism -- Intertwined Issues -- 2.2 ``Shallow'' Effects of Color labelling -- 3 Frames and Representation of Colors -- 4 Color Words and Flexible Use of Representations' Features -- 5 A Brief Excursus into Another Conceptual Domain: Counting and Motor Representations -- 6 Back on Colors: Stroop Task And Language-Perception Interface -- 7 Conclusions and Open Questions -- References -- Implicatures and Naturalness -- 1 Theoretical Background -- 2 Input Data -- 3 Building an Implicature Space -- 4 Naturalness -- 5 Concluding Remarks -- References.
Perception, Types and Frames -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Types and Cognition -- 3 Record Types and Frames -- 4 Conclusion -- References -- Conceptualizing Eventualities -- An XMG Account of Multiplicity of Meaning in Derivation -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Data and Analysis -- 3 XMG Implementation -- 4 Conclusion -- References -- Operationalizing the Role of Context in Language Variation: The Role of Perspective Alignment in the Spanish Imperfective Domain -- 1 Introduction -- 2 On the Spanish Present-Progressive and Simple-Present Markers -- 3 The Meaning of the Progressive and the Imperfective: A Communicative Perspective -- 4 The Markers of the Spanish Progressive Are not in Free Variation: Implications -- 5 Analysis: The Psychological Roots of Shared Perceptual Access -- 6 Summary and Conclusions -- References -- A Frame-Based Analysis of Verbal Particles in Hungarian -- 1 The Verbal Particle in Hungarian -- 2 Scalar Analysis and Frame-Semantic Representation -- 3 Semantic Analysis of Verbal Particles -- 4 Semantic Composition and the Syntax-Semantics Interface -- 5 Summary -- References -- On the Fictive Reading of German Steigen 'Climb, Rise': A Frame Account -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Previous Accounts of Fictive Motion -- 3 The Four Major Readings of Steigen 'Climb, Rise, Step' -- 4 Frame Analysis of Dynamic Steigen: Manner and Directional Reading -- 4.1 Frames for Objects -- 4.2 Steigenmm -- 4.3 Steigendir -- 5 Steigenfict: Admissible Modifiers and Subject Referents -- 6 Frame Analysis of Steigenfict -- 7 Steigenins -- 8 Conclusion -- References -- Cascades. Goldman's Level-Generation, Multilevel Categorization of Action, and Multilevel Verb Semantics -- 1 Introduction -- 1.1 The Intuitive Notion of "Level-Generation" -- 1.2 The Structure of the Chapter -- 2 Level-Generation: Doing Multiple Things in One.
2.1 Preliminary: Act-Tokens, Act-Types, and Act-TTs -- 2.2 Goldman's Theory of Act-Levels -- 2.3 Critics of Goldman's Theory -- 2.4 Goldman's Theory of Human Action Applied to Cognitive Representation -- 2.5 Level-Generation and Augmentation Generation -- 2.6 C-Constitution -- 3 Cascades and Verb Classes -- 3.1 Basic Versus Non-basic Act-Types -- 3.2 Verbs of Basic and Non-basic Action -- 3.3 Criterion Predicates -- 3.4 Means of Explicit Level-Generation -- 3.5 Implicit Level-Generation -- 4 Cascades and Frames -- 4.1 Barsalou Frames -- 4.2 Cascades in Frame Theory -- 5 The Writing Cascade -- 5.1 Austin's Speech Act Cascade -- 5.2 The Cascade Structure of Writing by Hand -- 5.3 Types of Products and Levels of Manner Modification -- 5.4 Agencies at Cascade Levels -- 5.5 Objects at Cascade Levels -- 5.6 A Multitrack Notion of C-Constitution -- 6 Reference and Composition -- 6.1 Meaning and Reference of the Verb Write -- 6.2 Cascades and Composition -- 7 Conclusion: Cascades in Cognition, Semantics, and Life -- References -- Prototypes and Probabilities -- Modification and Default Inheritance -- 1 Prototype Compositionality and Modification -- 2 An Extended Modification Model -- 3 Experimental Data -- 3.1 Constraint Influences in the Data of Connolly et al. (ch14Connollyetal2007) -- 3.2 Experiments -- 4 Conclusion -- References -- A Frame-Theoretic Model of Bayesian Category Learning -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Weighted Bayesian Models of Categorisation -- 3 Frames -- 3.1 Challenges and Future Developments -- 4 Conclusion -- References -- Extremes are Typical. A Game Theoretical Derivation -- 1 Typicality: Prototypes Versus Stereotypes -- 2 Typicality and Structured Meaning Spaces -- 3 Extremes and Iterated Best Response -- 4 Conclusion and Outlook -- References -- Grading Similarity -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Similarity Demonstratives.
3 Three Types of Similarity Expressions -- 4 Gradability of ähnlich/similar -- 4.1 What Does It Mean to Be More Similar? -- 4.2 Gradability and Granularity -- 5 Conclusion -- Appendix: Granularity in Multi-dimensional Attribute Spaces -- Domains and Representations -- Indiscernibility -- Granularity and Gradability -- References -- Cognition and Psychology -- Escitalopram Restores Reversal Learning Impairments in Rats with Lesions of Orbital Frontal Cortex -- 1 Introduction -- 1.1 How Is Behavioural Flexibility Measured and Cognitive Flexibility Inferred? -- 2 Methods -- 2.1 Animals -- 2.2 Apparatus -- 2.3 Surgery -- 2.4 Experiment 1: The Effects of Escitalopram on Reversal Learning -- 2.5 Experiment 2: Fos Activity After 1 mg/kg Escitalopram -- 3 Results -- 3.1 Experiment 1 -- 3.2 Experiment 2 -- 4 Discussion -- 4.1 Reversal Learning -- 4.2 The Effects of OFC Lesions on Reversal Learning -- 4.3 The Effects of Escitalopram on Reversal Learning -- 4.4 Fos Activity -- References -- Rat Ultrasonic Vocalizations as Social Reinforcers-Implications for a Multilevel Model of the Cognitive Representation of Action and Rats' Social World -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Methods -- 2.1 Subjects -- 2.2 Experimental Setup -- 2.3 Acoustic Stimuli -- 2.4 Task Design -- 2.5 Data Analysis -- 3 Results -- 4 Discussion -- 5 A Cognitive Perspective: Acting at Multiple Levels -- 5.1 Goldman's Multilevel Theory of Human Action -- 5.2 Cascades and Learning -- 5.3 Applying Cascade Theory to Rat Behavior in the Experiments Reported -- 5.4 Psychological Commitments of the Cascade Approach -- 5.5 What Can the Cascade Approach Buy Us? -- 6 Conclusions -- References -- Influence of Manner Adverbs on Action Verb Processing -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Experiment 1 -- 2.1 Methods -- 2.2 Results -- 3 Experiment 2 -- 3.1 Methods -- 3.2 Results -- 3.3 Discussion -- References.
When Mechanical Computations Explain Better.
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Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2024. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.
Electronic books.
Gamerschlag, Thomas.
Kalenscher, Tobias.
Schrenk, Markus.
Zeevat, Henk.
Print version: Löbner, Sebastian Concepts, Frames and Cascades in Semantics, Cognition and Ontology Cham : Springer International Publishing AG,c2021 9783030501990
ProQuest (Firm)
Language, Cognition, and Mind Series
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language English
format eBook
author Löbner, Sebastian.
spellingShingle Löbner, Sebastian.
Concepts, Frames and Cascades in Semantics, Cognition and Ontology.
Language, Cognition, and Mind Series ;
Intro -- Preface -- Contents -- Introduction -- 1 Cognitive Structures in Natural Language Semantics -- 2 Cognitive Structures in Philosophy -- 3 Cognitive Structures in Psychology -- 4 Summaries -- 4.1 Part I Pushing the Boundaries of Formal Semantics -- 4.2 Part II Concept Theory -- 4.3 Part III Conceptualizing Eventualities -- 4.4 Part IV Prototypes and Probabilities -- 4.5 Part V Cognition and Psychology -- References -- Pushing the Boundaries of Formal Semantics -- A Compositional Pluralist Semantics for Extensional and Attitude Verbs -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Accounts of Truth-Conditional and Attitude Content -- 2.1 The Relation Between Truth-Conditional and Attitude Content -- 2.2 Attempts at (Re-)Connecting Truth-Conditional and Attitude Content -- 2.3 Desiderata for an Account of Truth-Conditional and Attitude Content -- 3 Integrated Semantics -- 3.1 Centered Informational Situations -- 3.2 The Integrated Content of Sentences -- 3.3 The Interpretation of Proper Names -- 4 The Compositional Interpretation of VPs -- 5 Extensional and Attitude Verbs in IS -- 5.1 The Interpretation of Extensional Verbs -- 5.2 The Interpretation of Attitude Verbs -- 5.3 Attitudinal Embeddings of Extensional Verbs -- 6 Conclusion and Future Work -- References -- Counting Possible Configurations -- 1 Introduction -- 2 The Problem with Configurations -- 3 An Individual Concept Analysis -- 4 Generalizing the Individual Concept Analysis -- 4.1 Is Everything an Individual Concept? -- 4.2 Coercion to Constituting Parts -- 4.3 Joining and Counting Individual Concepts -- 4.4 Collective and Cumulative Interpretations -- 5 The Property Analysis -- 6 Conclusion -- References -- Structure and Ontology in Nonlocal Readings of Adjectives -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Nonlocal Readings of Adjectives -- 2.1 On `Occasional' -- 2.2 Returning to `Average' -- 2.3 Wrong.
2.4 `Whole' and `Entire' -- 2.5 Epistemic Adjectives -- 2.6 Same and Different -- 2.7 Modal Superlatives: `Possible' and Its Kin -- 2.8 Miscellaneous Obscurities and Novelties -- 3 Three Classes of Nonlocal Readings -- 4 Some Background -- 4.1 Incorporation -- 4.2 Structure Versus Ontology: The First Step -- 4.3 The Kind Analysis of `Occasional' -- 5 The Modular Strategy -- 5.1 Determiner-Like Adjectives -- 5.2 Determiners That Work -- 5.3 Determiners That Don't Work -- 5.4 A Word About `Occasional' -- 5.5 The Weak Quantifier Class -- 5.6 Summary -- 6 Taking Stock -- 6.1 Could Things Be so Simple? -- 6.2 Kinds and Concepts -- 7 Final Remarks -- References -- Concept Theory -- How Can Semantics Avoid the Troubles with the Analytic/Synthetic Distinction? -- 1 Semantics and the Architecture of Cognition -- 2 The Analytic/Synthetic Distinction and Semantic Theories -- 2.1 Causatives -- 2.2 Indeterminacy (or "Coercion") -- 3 Alternative: Atomism and Inferences -- 3.1 Back to Causatives -- 3.2 Back to "Coercion" -- 3.3 Conclusion: Atomic Concepts and Inferences -- References -- Linguistic Relativity and Flexibility of Mental Representations: Color Terms in a Frame Based Analysis -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Color Terms and Whorfianism: Some Coordinates -- 2.1 Universalism, ``deep'' and ``shallow'' Whorfianism -- Intertwined Issues -- 2.2 ``Shallow'' Effects of Color labelling -- 3 Frames and Representation of Colors -- 4 Color Words and Flexible Use of Representations' Features -- 5 A Brief Excursus into Another Conceptual Domain: Counting and Motor Representations -- 6 Back on Colors: Stroop Task And Language-Perception Interface -- 7 Conclusions and Open Questions -- References -- Implicatures and Naturalness -- 1 Theoretical Background -- 2 Input Data -- 3 Building an Implicature Space -- 4 Naturalness -- 5 Concluding Remarks -- References.
Perception, Types and Frames -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Types and Cognition -- 3 Record Types and Frames -- 4 Conclusion -- References -- Conceptualizing Eventualities -- An XMG Account of Multiplicity of Meaning in Derivation -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Data and Analysis -- 3 XMG Implementation -- 4 Conclusion -- References -- Operationalizing the Role of Context in Language Variation: The Role of Perspective Alignment in the Spanish Imperfective Domain -- 1 Introduction -- 2 On the Spanish Present-Progressive and Simple-Present Markers -- 3 The Meaning of the Progressive and the Imperfective: A Communicative Perspective -- 4 The Markers of the Spanish Progressive Are not in Free Variation: Implications -- 5 Analysis: The Psychological Roots of Shared Perceptual Access -- 6 Summary and Conclusions -- References -- A Frame-Based Analysis of Verbal Particles in Hungarian -- 1 The Verbal Particle in Hungarian -- 2 Scalar Analysis and Frame-Semantic Representation -- 3 Semantic Analysis of Verbal Particles -- 4 Semantic Composition and the Syntax-Semantics Interface -- 5 Summary -- References -- On the Fictive Reading of German Steigen 'Climb, Rise': A Frame Account -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Previous Accounts of Fictive Motion -- 3 The Four Major Readings of Steigen 'Climb, Rise, Step' -- 4 Frame Analysis of Dynamic Steigen: Manner and Directional Reading -- 4.1 Frames for Objects -- 4.2 Steigenmm -- 4.3 Steigendir -- 5 Steigenfict: Admissible Modifiers and Subject Referents -- 6 Frame Analysis of Steigenfict -- 7 Steigenins -- 8 Conclusion -- References -- Cascades. Goldman's Level-Generation, Multilevel Categorization of Action, and Multilevel Verb Semantics -- 1 Introduction -- 1.1 The Intuitive Notion of "Level-Generation" -- 1.2 The Structure of the Chapter -- 2 Level-Generation: Doing Multiple Things in One.
2.1 Preliminary: Act-Tokens, Act-Types, and Act-TTs -- 2.2 Goldman's Theory of Act-Levels -- 2.3 Critics of Goldman's Theory -- 2.4 Goldman's Theory of Human Action Applied to Cognitive Representation -- 2.5 Level-Generation and Augmentation Generation -- 2.6 C-Constitution -- 3 Cascades and Verb Classes -- 3.1 Basic Versus Non-basic Act-Types -- 3.2 Verbs of Basic and Non-basic Action -- 3.3 Criterion Predicates -- 3.4 Means of Explicit Level-Generation -- 3.5 Implicit Level-Generation -- 4 Cascades and Frames -- 4.1 Barsalou Frames -- 4.2 Cascades in Frame Theory -- 5 The Writing Cascade -- 5.1 Austin's Speech Act Cascade -- 5.2 The Cascade Structure of Writing by Hand -- 5.3 Types of Products and Levels of Manner Modification -- 5.4 Agencies at Cascade Levels -- 5.5 Objects at Cascade Levels -- 5.6 A Multitrack Notion of C-Constitution -- 6 Reference and Composition -- 6.1 Meaning and Reference of the Verb Write -- 6.2 Cascades and Composition -- 7 Conclusion: Cascades in Cognition, Semantics, and Life -- References -- Prototypes and Probabilities -- Modification and Default Inheritance -- 1 Prototype Compositionality and Modification -- 2 An Extended Modification Model -- 3 Experimental Data -- 3.1 Constraint Influences in the Data of Connolly et al. (ch14Connollyetal2007) -- 3.2 Experiments -- 4 Conclusion -- References -- A Frame-Theoretic Model of Bayesian Category Learning -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Weighted Bayesian Models of Categorisation -- 3 Frames -- 3.1 Challenges and Future Developments -- 4 Conclusion -- References -- Extremes are Typical. A Game Theoretical Derivation -- 1 Typicality: Prototypes Versus Stereotypes -- 2 Typicality and Structured Meaning Spaces -- 3 Extremes and Iterated Best Response -- 4 Conclusion and Outlook -- References -- Grading Similarity -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Similarity Demonstratives.
3 Three Types of Similarity Expressions -- 4 Gradability of ähnlich/similar -- 4.1 What Does It Mean to Be More Similar? -- 4.2 Gradability and Granularity -- 5 Conclusion -- Appendix: Granularity in Multi-dimensional Attribute Spaces -- Domains and Representations -- Indiscernibility -- Granularity and Gradability -- References -- Cognition and Psychology -- Escitalopram Restores Reversal Learning Impairments in Rats with Lesions of Orbital Frontal Cortex -- 1 Introduction -- 1.1 How Is Behavioural Flexibility Measured and Cognitive Flexibility Inferred? -- 2 Methods -- 2.1 Animals -- 2.2 Apparatus -- 2.3 Surgery -- 2.4 Experiment 1: The Effects of Escitalopram on Reversal Learning -- 2.5 Experiment 2: Fos Activity After 1 mg/kg Escitalopram -- 3 Results -- 3.1 Experiment 1 -- 3.2 Experiment 2 -- 4 Discussion -- 4.1 Reversal Learning -- 4.2 The Effects of OFC Lesions on Reversal Learning -- 4.3 The Effects of Escitalopram on Reversal Learning -- 4.4 Fos Activity -- References -- Rat Ultrasonic Vocalizations as Social Reinforcers-Implications for a Multilevel Model of the Cognitive Representation of Action and Rats' Social World -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Methods -- 2.1 Subjects -- 2.2 Experimental Setup -- 2.3 Acoustic Stimuli -- 2.4 Task Design -- 2.5 Data Analysis -- 3 Results -- 4 Discussion -- 5 A Cognitive Perspective: Acting at Multiple Levels -- 5.1 Goldman's Multilevel Theory of Human Action -- 5.2 Cascades and Learning -- 5.3 Applying Cascade Theory to Rat Behavior in the Experiments Reported -- 5.4 Psychological Commitments of the Cascade Approach -- 5.5 What Can the Cascade Approach Buy Us? -- 6 Conclusions -- References -- Influence of Manner Adverbs on Action Verb Processing -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Experiment 1 -- 2.1 Methods -- 2.2 Results -- 3 Experiment 2 -- 3.1 Methods -- 3.2 Results -- 3.3 Discussion -- References.
When Mechanical Computations Explain Better.
author_facet Löbner, Sebastian.
Gamerschlag, Thomas.
Kalenscher, Tobias.
Schrenk, Markus.
Zeevat, Henk.
author_variant s l sl
author2 Gamerschlag, Thomas.
Kalenscher, Tobias.
Schrenk, Markus.
Zeevat, Henk.
author2_variant t g tg
t k tk
m s ms
h z hz
author2_role TeilnehmendeR
TeilnehmendeR
TeilnehmendeR
TeilnehmendeR
author_sort Löbner, Sebastian.
title Concepts, Frames and Cascades in Semantics, Cognition and Ontology.
title_full Concepts, Frames and Cascades in Semantics, Cognition and Ontology.
title_fullStr Concepts, Frames and Cascades in Semantics, Cognition and Ontology.
title_full_unstemmed Concepts, Frames and Cascades in Semantics, Cognition and Ontology.
title_auth Concepts, Frames and Cascades in Semantics, Cognition and Ontology.
title_new Concepts, Frames and Cascades in Semantics, Cognition and Ontology.
title_sort concepts, frames and cascades in semantics, cognition and ontology.
series Language, Cognition, and Mind Series ;
series2 Language, Cognition, and Mind Series ;
publisher Springer International Publishing AG,
publishDate 2021
physical 1 online resource (475 pages)
edition 1st ed.
contents Intro -- Preface -- Contents -- Introduction -- 1 Cognitive Structures in Natural Language Semantics -- 2 Cognitive Structures in Philosophy -- 3 Cognitive Structures in Psychology -- 4 Summaries -- 4.1 Part I Pushing the Boundaries of Formal Semantics -- 4.2 Part II Concept Theory -- 4.3 Part III Conceptualizing Eventualities -- 4.4 Part IV Prototypes and Probabilities -- 4.5 Part V Cognition and Psychology -- References -- Pushing the Boundaries of Formal Semantics -- A Compositional Pluralist Semantics for Extensional and Attitude Verbs -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Accounts of Truth-Conditional and Attitude Content -- 2.1 The Relation Between Truth-Conditional and Attitude Content -- 2.2 Attempts at (Re-)Connecting Truth-Conditional and Attitude Content -- 2.3 Desiderata for an Account of Truth-Conditional and Attitude Content -- 3 Integrated Semantics -- 3.1 Centered Informational Situations -- 3.2 The Integrated Content of Sentences -- 3.3 The Interpretation of Proper Names -- 4 The Compositional Interpretation of VPs -- 5 Extensional and Attitude Verbs in IS -- 5.1 The Interpretation of Extensional Verbs -- 5.2 The Interpretation of Attitude Verbs -- 5.3 Attitudinal Embeddings of Extensional Verbs -- 6 Conclusion and Future Work -- References -- Counting Possible Configurations -- 1 Introduction -- 2 The Problem with Configurations -- 3 An Individual Concept Analysis -- 4 Generalizing the Individual Concept Analysis -- 4.1 Is Everything an Individual Concept? -- 4.2 Coercion to Constituting Parts -- 4.3 Joining and Counting Individual Concepts -- 4.4 Collective and Cumulative Interpretations -- 5 The Property Analysis -- 6 Conclusion -- References -- Structure and Ontology in Nonlocal Readings of Adjectives -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Nonlocal Readings of Adjectives -- 2.1 On `Occasional' -- 2.2 Returning to `Average' -- 2.3 Wrong.
2.4 `Whole' and `Entire' -- 2.5 Epistemic Adjectives -- 2.6 Same and Different -- 2.7 Modal Superlatives: `Possible' and Its Kin -- 2.8 Miscellaneous Obscurities and Novelties -- 3 Three Classes of Nonlocal Readings -- 4 Some Background -- 4.1 Incorporation -- 4.2 Structure Versus Ontology: The First Step -- 4.3 The Kind Analysis of `Occasional' -- 5 The Modular Strategy -- 5.1 Determiner-Like Adjectives -- 5.2 Determiners That Work -- 5.3 Determiners That Don't Work -- 5.4 A Word About `Occasional' -- 5.5 The Weak Quantifier Class -- 5.6 Summary -- 6 Taking Stock -- 6.1 Could Things Be so Simple? -- 6.2 Kinds and Concepts -- 7 Final Remarks -- References -- Concept Theory -- How Can Semantics Avoid the Troubles with the Analytic/Synthetic Distinction? -- 1 Semantics and the Architecture of Cognition -- 2 The Analytic/Synthetic Distinction and Semantic Theories -- 2.1 Causatives -- 2.2 Indeterminacy (or "Coercion") -- 3 Alternative: Atomism and Inferences -- 3.1 Back to Causatives -- 3.2 Back to "Coercion" -- 3.3 Conclusion: Atomic Concepts and Inferences -- References -- Linguistic Relativity and Flexibility of Mental Representations: Color Terms in a Frame Based Analysis -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Color Terms and Whorfianism: Some Coordinates -- 2.1 Universalism, ``deep'' and ``shallow'' Whorfianism -- Intertwined Issues -- 2.2 ``Shallow'' Effects of Color labelling -- 3 Frames and Representation of Colors -- 4 Color Words and Flexible Use of Representations' Features -- 5 A Brief Excursus into Another Conceptual Domain: Counting and Motor Representations -- 6 Back on Colors: Stroop Task And Language-Perception Interface -- 7 Conclusions and Open Questions -- References -- Implicatures and Naturalness -- 1 Theoretical Background -- 2 Input Data -- 3 Building an Implicature Space -- 4 Naturalness -- 5 Concluding Remarks -- References.
Perception, Types and Frames -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Types and Cognition -- 3 Record Types and Frames -- 4 Conclusion -- References -- Conceptualizing Eventualities -- An XMG Account of Multiplicity of Meaning in Derivation -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Data and Analysis -- 3 XMG Implementation -- 4 Conclusion -- References -- Operationalizing the Role of Context in Language Variation: The Role of Perspective Alignment in the Spanish Imperfective Domain -- 1 Introduction -- 2 On the Spanish Present-Progressive and Simple-Present Markers -- 3 The Meaning of the Progressive and the Imperfective: A Communicative Perspective -- 4 The Markers of the Spanish Progressive Are not in Free Variation: Implications -- 5 Analysis: The Psychological Roots of Shared Perceptual Access -- 6 Summary and Conclusions -- References -- A Frame-Based Analysis of Verbal Particles in Hungarian -- 1 The Verbal Particle in Hungarian -- 2 Scalar Analysis and Frame-Semantic Representation -- 3 Semantic Analysis of Verbal Particles -- 4 Semantic Composition and the Syntax-Semantics Interface -- 5 Summary -- References -- On the Fictive Reading of German Steigen 'Climb, Rise': A Frame Account -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Previous Accounts of Fictive Motion -- 3 The Four Major Readings of Steigen 'Climb, Rise, Step' -- 4 Frame Analysis of Dynamic Steigen: Manner and Directional Reading -- 4.1 Frames for Objects -- 4.2 Steigenmm -- 4.3 Steigendir -- 5 Steigenfict: Admissible Modifiers and Subject Referents -- 6 Frame Analysis of Steigenfict -- 7 Steigenins -- 8 Conclusion -- References -- Cascades. Goldman's Level-Generation, Multilevel Categorization of Action, and Multilevel Verb Semantics -- 1 Introduction -- 1.1 The Intuitive Notion of "Level-Generation" -- 1.2 The Structure of the Chapter -- 2 Level-Generation: Doing Multiple Things in One.
2.1 Preliminary: Act-Tokens, Act-Types, and Act-TTs -- 2.2 Goldman's Theory of Act-Levels -- 2.3 Critics of Goldman's Theory -- 2.4 Goldman's Theory of Human Action Applied to Cognitive Representation -- 2.5 Level-Generation and Augmentation Generation -- 2.6 C-Constitution -- 3 Cascades and Verb Classes -- 3.1 Basic Versus Non-basic Act-Types -- 3.2 Verbs of Basic and Non-basic Action -- 3.3 Criterion Predicates -- 3.4 Means of Explicit Level-Generation -- 3.5 Implicit Level-Generation -- 4 Cascades and Frames -- 4.1 Barsalou Frames -- 4.2 Cascades in Frame Theory -- 5 The Writing Cascade -- 5.1 Austin's Speech Act Cascade -- 5.2 The Cascade Structure of Writing by Hand -- 5.3 Types of Products and Levels of Manner Modification -- 5.4 Agencies at Cascade Levels -- 5.5 Objects at Cascade Levels -- 5.6 A Multitrack Notion of C-Constitution -- 6 Reference and Composition -- 6.1 Meaning and Reference of the Verb Write -- 6.2 Cascades and Composition -- 7 Conclusion: Cascades in Cognition, Semantics, and Life -- References -- Prototypes and Probabilities -- Modification and Default Inheritance -- 1 Prototype Compositionality and Modification -- 2 An Extended Modification Model -- 3 Experimental Data -- 3.1 Constraint Influences in the Data of Connolly et al. (ch14Connollyetal2007) -- 3.2 Experiments -- 4 Conclusion -- References -- A Frame-Theoretic Model of Bayesian Category Learning -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Weighted Bayesian Models of Categorisation -- 3 Frames -- 3.1 Challenges and Future Developments -- 4 Conclusion -- References -- Extremes are Typical. A Game Theoretical Derivation -- 1 Typicality: Prototypes Versus Stereotypes -- 2 Typicality and Structured Meaning Spaces -- 3 Extremes and Iterated Best Response -- 4 Conclusion and Outlook -- References -- Grading Similarity -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Similarity Demonstratives.
3 Three Types of Similarity Expressions -- 4 Gradability of ähnlich/similar -- 4.1 What Does It Mean to Be More Similar? -- 4.2 Gradability and Granularity -- 5 Conclusion -- Appendix: Granularity in Multi-dimensional Attribute Spaces -- Domains and Representations -- Indiscernibility -- Granularity and Gradability -- References -- Cognition and Psychology -- Escitalopram Restores Reversal Learning Impairments in Rats with Lesions of Orbital Frontal Cortex -- 1 Introduction -- 1.1 How Is Behavioural Flexibility Measured and Cognitive Flexibility Inferred? -- 2 Methods -- 2.1 Animals -- 2.2 Apparatus -- 2.3 Surgery -- 2.4 Experiment 1: The Effects of Escitalopram on Reversal Learning -- 2.5 Experiment 2: Fos Activity After 1 mg/kg Escitalopram -- 3 Results -- 3.1 Experiment 1 -- 3.2 Experiment 2 -- 4 Discussion -- 4.1 Reversal Learning -- 4.2 The Effects of OFC Lesions on Reversal Learning -- 4.3 The Effects of Escitalopram on Reversal Learning -- 4.4 Fos Activity -- References -- Rat Ultrasonic Vocalizations as Social Reinforcers-Implications for a Multilevel Model of the Cognitive Representation of Action and Rats' Social World -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Methods -- 2.1 Subjects -- 2.2 Experimental Setup -- 2.3 Acoustic Stimuli -- 2.4 Task Design -- 2.5 Data Analysis -- 3 Results -- 4 Discussion -- 5 A Cognitive Perspective: Acting at Multiple Levels -- 5.1 Goldman's Multilevel Theory of Human Action -- 5.2 Cascades and Learning -- 5.3 Applying Cascade Theory to Rat Behavior in the Experiments Reported -- 5.4 Psychological Commitments of the Cascade Approach -- 5.5 What Can the Cascade Approach Buy Us? -- 6 Conclusions -- References -- Influence of Manner Adverbs on Action Verb Processing -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Experiment 1 -- 2.1 Methods -- 2.2 Results -- 3 Experiment 2 -- 3.1 Methods -- 3.2 Results -- 3.3 Discussion -- References.
When Mechanical Computations Explain Better.
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-- 4.2 Coercion to Constituting Parts -- 4.3 Joining and Counting Individual Concepts -- 4.4 Collective and Cumulative Interpretations -- 5 The Property Analysis -- 6 Conclusion -- References -- Structure and Ontology in Nonlocal Readings of Adjectives -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Nonlocal Readings of Adjectives -- 2.1 On `Occasional' -- 2.2 Returning to `Average' -- 2.3 Wrong.</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="505" ind1="8" ind2=" "><subfield code="a">2.4 `Whole' and `Entire' -- 2.5 Epistemic Adjectives -- 2.6 Same and Different -- 2.7 Modal Superlatives: `Possible' and Its Kin -- 2.8 Miscellaneous Obscurities and Novelties -- 3 Three Classes of Nonlocal Readings -- 4 Some Background -- 4.1 Incorporation -- 4.2 Structure Versus Ontology: The First Step -- 4.3 The Kind Analysis of `Occasional' -- 5 The Modular Strategy -- 5.1 Determiner-Like Adjectives -- 5.2 Determiners That Work -- 5.3 Determiners That Don't Work -- 5.4 A Word About `Occasional' -- 5.5 The Weak Quantifier Class -- 5.6 Summary -- 6 Taking Stock -- 6.1 Could Things Be so Simple? -- 6.2 Kinds and Concepts -- 7 Final Remarks -- References -- Concept Theory -- How Can Semantics Avoid the Troubles with the Analytic/Synthetic Distinction? -- 1 Semantics and the Architecture of Cognition -- 2 The Analytic/Synthetic Distinction and Semantic Theories -- 2.1 Causatives -- 2.2 Indeterminacy (or "Coercion") -- 3 Alternative: Atomism and Inferences -- 3.1 Back to Causatives -- 3.2 Back to "Coercion" -- 3.3 Conclusion: Atomic Concepts and Inferences -- References -- Linguistic Relativity and Flexibility of Mental Representations: Color Terms in a Frame Based Analysis -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Color Terms and Whorfianism: Some Coordinates -- 2.1 Universalism, ``deep'' and ``shallow'' Whorfianism -- Intertwined Issues -- 2.2 ``Shallow'' Effects of Color labelling -- 3 Frames and Representation of Colors -- 4 Color Words and Flexible Use of Representations' Features -- 5 A Brief Excursus into Another Conceptual Domain: Counting and Motor Representations -- 6 Back on Colors: Stroop Task And Language-Perception Interface -- 7 Conclusions and Open Questions -- References -- Implicatures and Naturalness -- 1 Theoretical Background -- 2 Input Data -- 3 Building an Implicature Space -- 4 Naturalness -- 5 Concluding Remarks -- References.</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="505" ind1="8" ind2=" "><subfield code="a">Perception, Types and Frames -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Types and Cognition -- 3 Record Types and Frames -- 4 Conclusion -- References -- Conceptualizing Eventualities -- An XMG Account of Multiplicity of Meaning in Derivation -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Data and Analysis -- 3 XMG Implementation -- 4 Conclusion -- References -- Operationalizing the Role of Context in Language Variation: The Role of Perspective Alignment in the Spanish Imperfective Domain -- 1 Introduction -- 2 On the Spanish Present-Progressive and Simple-Present Markers -- 3 The Meaning of the Progressive and the Imperfective: A Communicative Perspective -- 4 The Markers of the Spanish Progressive Are not in Free Variation: Implications -- 5 Analysis: The Psychological Roots of Shared Perceptual Access -- 6 Summary and Conclusions -- References -- A Frame-Based Analysis of Verbal Particles in Hungarian -- 1 The Verbal Particle in Hungarian -- 2 Scalar Analysis and Frame-Semantic Representation -- 3 Semantic Analysis of Verbal Particles -- 4 Semantic Composition and the Syntax-Semantics Interface -- 5 Summary -- References -- On the Fictive Reading of German Steigen 'Climb, Rise': A Frame Account -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Previous Accounts of Fictive Motion -- 3 The Four Major Readings of Steigen 'Climb, Rise, Step' -- 4 Frame Analysis of Dynamic Steigen: Manner and Directional Reading -- 4.1 Frames for Objects -- 4.2 Steigenmm -- 4.3 Steigendir -- 5 Steigenfict: Admissible Modifiers and Subject Referents -- 6 Frame Analysis of Steigenfict -- 7 Steigenins -- 8 Conclusion -- References -- Cascades. Goldman's Level-Generation, Multilevel Categorization of Action, and Multilevel Verb Semantics -- 1 Introduction -- 1.1 The Intuitive Notion of "Level-Generation" -- 1.2 The Structure of the Chapter -- 2 Level-Generation: Doing Multiple Things in One.</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="505" ind1="8" ind2=" "><subfield code="a">2.1 Preliminary: Act-Tokens, Act-Types, and Act-TTs -- 2.2 Goldman's Theory of Act-Levels -- 2.3 Critics of Goldman's Theory -- 2.4 Goldman's Theory of Human Action Applied to Cognitive Representation -- 2.5 Level-Generation and Augmentation Generation -- 2.6 C-Constitution -- 3 Cascades and Verb Classes -- 3.1 Basic Versus Non-basic Act-Types -- 3.2 Verbs of Basic and Non-basic Action -- 3.3 Criterion Predicates -- 3.4 Means of Explicit Level-Generation -- 3.5 Implicit Level-Generation -- 4 Cascades and Frames -- 4.1 Barsalou Frames -- 4.2 Cascades in Frame Theory -- 5 The Writing Cascade -- 5.1 Austin's Speech Act Cascade -- 5.2 The Cascade Structure of Writing by Hand -- 5.3 Types of Products and Levels of Manner Modification -- 5.4 Agencies at Cascade Levels -- 5.5 Objects at Cascade Levels -- 5.6 A Multitrack Notion of C-Constitution -- 6 Reference and Composition -- 6.1 Meaning and Reference of the Verb Write -- 6.2 Cascades and Composition -- 7 Conclusion: Cascades in Cognition, Semantics, and Life -- References -- Prototypes and Probabilities -- Modification and Default Inheritance -- 1 Prototype Compositionality and Modification -- 2 An Extended Modification Model -- 3 Experimental Data -- 3.1 Constraint Influences in the Data of Connolly et al. (ch14Connollyetal2007) -- 3.2 Experiments -- 4 Conclusion -- References -- A Frame-Theoretic Model of Bayesian Category Learning -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Weighted Bayesian Models of Categorisation -- 3 Frames -- 3.1 Challenges and Future Developments -- 4 Conclusion -- References -- Extremes are Typical. 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