The Neural Representations of Function Words : Neurolinguistic Beliefs Reconsidered in the Light of Grammaticalisation Theory
(2011) SPVR01 20111Master's Programme: Language and Linguistics
General Linguistics
- Abstract
- It has in recent years been shown that some linguistic items, in particular lexical and abstracted movement verbs, activate the motor cortex in the human brain while being processed. The present study sets out to investigate how far this activation is retained for grammaticalised motion verbs which have shed their lexical content in exchange for grammatical functionality. Traditional literature suggests that content words and function words are stringently separated in the brain, which becomes questionable in the light of grammaticalisation processes. An analysis of leg movements primed with lexical and grammaticalised leg movement verbs as well as non-movement verbs found a significant effect of both semantic and functional motion words.... (More)
- It has in recent years been shown that some linguistic items, in particular lexical and abstracted movement verbs, activate the motor cortex in the human brain while being processed. The present study sets out to investigate how far this activation is retained for grammaticalised motion verbs which have shed their lexical content in exchange for grammatical functionality. Traditional literature suggests that content words and function words are stringently separated in the brain, which becomes questionable in the light of grammaticalisation processes. An analysis of leg movements primed with lexical and grammaticalised leg movement verbs as well as non-movement verbs found a significant effect of both semantic and functional motion words. This finding does not only further support the hypothesis that the processing of certain types of words involves the motor cortex, but also suggests that this activation is retained if words become grammaticalised. If function words, as generally assumed, do at some point experience a restriction to the brain’s core language areas, this development must take place at a very late stage in grammaticalisation, possibly with the loss of either the subjacent content word or the awareness of the relatedness of content and function word, due to extreme phonetic reduction. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
http://lup.lub.lu.se/student-papers/record/2438561
- author
- Gosselke, Sabine LU
- supervisor
-
- Mikael Roll LU
- Merle Horne LU
- organization
- course
- SPVR01 20111
- year
- 2011
- type
- H2 - Master's Degree (Two Years)
- subject
- keywords
- grammaticalisation, neurolinguistics, function words, processing, motor cortex, movement priming
- language
- English
- id
- 2438561
- date added to LUP
- 2012-04-13 11:34:26
- date last changed
- 2012-05-15 13:06:36
@misc{2438561, abstract = {{It has in recent years been shown that some linguistic items, in particular lexical and abstracted movement verbs, activate the motor cortex in the human brain while being processed. The present study sets out to investigate how far this activation is retained for grammaticalised motion verbs which have shed their lexical content in exchange for grammatical functionality. Traditional literature suggests that content words and function words are stringently separated in the brain, which becomes questionable in the light of grammaticalisation processes. An analysis of leg movements primed with lexical and grammaticalised leg movement verbs as well as non-movement verbs found a significant effect of both semantic and functional motion words. This finding does not only further support the hypothesis that the processing of certain types of words involves the motor cortex, but also suggests that this activation is retained if words become grammaticalised. If function words, as generally assumed, do at some point experience a restriction to the brain’s core language areas, this development must take place at a very late stage in grammaticalisation, possibly with the loss of either the subjacent content word or the awareness of the relatedness of content and function word, due to extreme phonetic reduction.}}, author = {{Gosselke, Sabine}}, language = {{eng}}, note = {{Student Paper}}, title = {{The Neural Representations of Function Words : Neurolinguistic Beliefs Reconsidered in the Light of Grammaticalisation Theory}}, year = {{2011}}, }