Dymarska, Agata and Connell, Louise and Banks, Briony and Willems, Roel
(2022)
Linguistic Bootstrapping Allows More Real-world Object Concepts to Be Held in Mind.
Collabra: Psychology, 8 (1).
ISSN 2474-7394
Abstract
The linguistic-simulation approach to cognition predicts that language can enable more
efficient conceptual processing than purely sensorimotor-affective simulations of
concepts. We tested the implications of this approach in memory for sequences of
real-world objects, where use of linguistic labels (i.e., words and phrases) could enable
more efficient representation of object concepts than representation via full
sensorimotor simulation; a proposal called linguistic bootstrapping. In three
pre-registered experiments using a nonverbal paradigm, we asked participants to
remember sequences of contextually-situated, real-world objects (e.g., the ingredients for
a recipe), and later asked them to select the correct objects from arrays of distractors.
Critically, we used articulatory suppression to selectively suppress implicit activation of
linguistic labels, which we predicted would impair performance by reducing the number
of objects that could be held in mind simultaneously. We found that suppressing access
to language when learning the sequences impaired accuracy of object recognition, though
not latency, and that this impairment was not simply dual-task load. Results show that a
sequence of up to 10 contextually-situated object concepts can be held in mind when
language is inhibited, but this increases to 12 objects when language is available. The
findings support the linguistic bootstrapping hypothesis that representing familiar object
concepts normally relies on language, and that implicitly-retrieved object labels, used as
linguistic placeholders, can increase the number of objects that can be simultaneously
represented beyond what sensorimotor information alone can accomplish.
Item Type: |
Article
|
Keywords: |
concepts; sensorimotor simulation; mental representation; linguistic labels; linguistic bootstrapping; |
Academic Unit: |
Faculty of Science and Engineering > Psychology |
Item ID: |
19117 |
Identification Number: |
https://doi.org/10.1525/collabra.40171 |
Depositing User: |
Louise Connell
|
Date Deposited: |
29 Oct 2024 15:20 |
Journal or Publication Title: |
Collabra: Psychology |
Publisher: |
University of California Press |
Refereed: |
Yes |
URI: |
|
Use Licence: |
This item is available under a Creative Commons Attribution Non Commercial Share Alike Licence (CC BY-NC-SA). Details of this licence are available
here |
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