Almost all past empirical work exploring the Functional Geometric Framework
(FGF) proposed by Coventry and Garrod (2004) for spatial language use has been based
on a single language - English. Therefore the extent to which the framework applies
across languages has not been established. The current thesis investigated whether
geometric and extra-geometric factors affect production and comprehension of spatial
language across three languages; English, Finnish and Spanish. Eight cross-linguistic
appropriateness rating studies identified similarities and differences in the factors that
underlie our verbal conceptualisation of space across three classes of spatial
relations/terms: 1) topological relations (e.g., in/on), 2) vertical axis projective terms
(e.g., above/below), and 3) horizontal axis projective terms (e.g., in front of/behind) and
their Finnish and Spanish counterparts. There was support for the FGF crosslinguistically,
and many of the results were in line with what has been previously
discovered in research on English, although extra-geometric factors, such as conceptual
knowledge and dynamic kinematic-routines, were revealed to often have different
weightings in different languages.
Given the importance of extra-geometric factors across languages, the second
part of the thesis asks whether extra-geometric factors also influence (non-linguistic)
memory for spatial object relations. This question was addressed by two non-verbal
spatial memory experiments which revealed that this was the case in some
circumstances. Horizontal shifts in position by a potentially horizontally mobile object
were more accurately remembered in specific conditions, i.e. when the located object
was positioned along the diagonal axes of the reference object rather than cardinal axes,
and when the movement was against the direction of expected movement of the located
object. However, location memory for vertical shifts of position, was not affected in
such a way by potentially vertically mobile objects in any circumstances.
In the closing chapter of the thesis the generalisability of the FGF for crosslinguistic
and non-linguistic relations is discussed.
Date of Award | 2008 |
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Original language | English |
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Awarding Institution | |
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Geometric and Extra-Geometric Spatial Conceptualisation: A cross-linguistic and non-verbal perspective
Crum-Lindqvist, A. (Author). 2008
Student thesis: PhD