cognitive reference point reporter : sherry professor : daphne yuan

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Cognitive reference point Reporter : Sherry Professor : Daphne Yuan

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Page 1: Cognitive reference point Reporter : Sherry Professor : Daphne Yuan

Cognitive reference point

Reporter : SherryProfessor : Daphne Yuan

Page 2: Cognitive reference point Reporter : Sherry Professor : Daphne Yuan

Rosch

• Focal Colors• Line orientation• Numbers

Page 3: Cognitive reference point Reporter : Sherry Professor : Daphne Yuan

Focal Colors

• People across cultures consistently choose focal colors(i.e. basic colors) as prototypes.

• Shows that certain colors are salient in people’s mind.

Which slices look like they could be composed of two or more colors ?

Page 4: Cognitive reference point Reporter : Sherry Professor : Daphne Yuan

Line orientation

• vertical, horizontal, and diagonal lines would serve as reference orientations.

The results in this domain were less uniform than in the case of color.

Page 5: Cognitive reference point Reporter : Sherry Professor : Daphne Yuan

Numbers

• expected multiples of 10 to fulfill the CRP function.

10 50 100 1000

17 36 164 1027The top one is faster to into to people’s mind

Page 6: Cognitive reference point Reporter : Sherry Professor : Daphne Yuan

Elaborations of the Roschean model

• This section briefly reviews some of the relevant studies in cognitive and social psychology, behavioral economics, marketing and management research.

Page 7: Cognitive reference point Reporter : Sherry Professor : Daphne Yuan

Similarity judgments

• It is the most straightforward application of the Roschean CRP model

• People usually have one preferred direction of comparison. They usually compare a less prominent item to a more prominent item (CRP).

Page 8: Cognitive reference point Reporter : Sherry Professor : Daphne Yuan

Similarity judgments

• Example (Tversky, 1977) :

• A CRP-item is preferred in the base-position (i.e. standard of comparison), whereas a non-CRP element is generally used as a target of comparison.

North Korea is similar to China

China is similar to North Korea

is similar to

Page 9: Cognitive reference point Reporter : Sherry Professor : Daphne Yuan

Similarity judgments

• Example (Tversky, 1977) :

• A CRP-item is preferred in the base-position (i.e. standard of comparison), whereas a non-CRP element is generally used as a target of comparison.

North Korea is similar to China

China is similar to North Korea

is similar to

Page 10: Cognitive reference point Reporter : Sherry Professor : Daphne Yuan

Spatial cognition

• It were shown to be crucial both in child development and in the learning of new environments by adults.

• For example, When getting to know a new city, people would usually start by memorizing the most salient points.

Paths develop as elaborations of the landmark network.

Page 11: Cognitive reference point Reporter : Sherry Professor : Daphne Yuan

Spatial cognition

• Locations without a reference point status are usually judged nearer to spatial reference points than are reference points to non-CRP locations.

• We can tentatively conclude that despite being diverse in form and function, all reference points seem to display the kind of asymmetry.

Page 12: Cognitive reference point Reporter : Sherry Professor : Daphne Yuan

Judgments of symbolic magnitude

• It describes the way people compare two items in terms of magnitude (e.g. magnitude of digits, size of objects, geo

• graphic distances).• The reference point can be indicated explicitly, as in Choose

the stimulus closer to X.

Page 13: Cognitive reference point Reporter : Sherry Professor : Daphne Yuan

Judgments of symbolic magnitude

• For example, it has been argued that the question Which is larger may trigger the upper bound as a reference point, whereas the question Which is smaller is likely to activate the lower bound to which the stimuli will be compared.

Page 14: Cognitive reference point Reporter : Sherry Professor : Daphne Yuan

Judgments of symbolic magnitude

• Reaction times increase when people have to judge which of the two large objects is smaller or which of the two small objects is larger.

• This is an instantiation of the so-called semantic congruity effect.

Page 15: Cognitive reference point Reporter : Sherry Professor : Daphne Yuan

Social judgments

• People usually judge others as more similar to themselves.• The subjects in their experiments rated a friend as more

similar to themselves than vice versa.• Social stereotypes usually function as reference points for

making judgements about the self.• However, the self serves as a CRP for social stereotypes with

few known attributes.• Such reference points include beliefs, language, facial

expressions, country of origin and gestures.

Page 16: Cognitive reference point Reporter : Sherry Professor : Daphne Yuan

Behavioural economics

• Kahneman (1992) applied this analysis to the study of negotiation behavior.

• He has shown that depending upon the CRP chosen in negotiations, people will evaluate the same result as either gain or loss.

• It is therefore possible to change the result of negotiations by manipulating reference points.

Page 17: Cognitive reference point Reporter : Sherry Professor : Daphne Yuan

marketing aresearch

• The notion of a reference point also plays an important role in marketing research, where it is sometimes called reference price.

• This internal reference price can be adjusted, for instance, by broadening price dispersion or manipulating confidence associated with price expectations

• An unrelated product stored in the short-term memory can affect the decision to buy a target product.

Page 18: Cognitive reference point Reporter : Sherry Professor : Daphne Yuan

marketing research

• Example : if before buying a cooker you encountered a price of a

BMW, your willingness to pay for the cooker will increase for even an expensive cooker will still be a lot cheaper than a BMW.

willingness to pay ↑

Page 19: Cognitive reference point Reporter : Sherry Professor : Daphne Yuan

Management studies

• Prospect Theory with its inventory of reference points has also been applied to the studies of human organizational behavior in work settings.

• Goals function as reference points and alter the value of outcomes.

• This explains why people strive harder when they have a specific goal, such as finishing the paper by the end of the month.

Page 20: Cognitive reference point Reporter : Sherry Professor : Daphne Yuan

Ubiquity of reference-point reasoning

• Reference-point reasoning observed across various kinds of human activity is the asymmetry between reference and non-reference items.

• Given the ubiquity of CRPs, we have reasons to expect that language also involves a lot of reference-point reasoning.

• language is not a separate module, but an integral part of cognition, whose organizing principles from the general properties of the human mind.

Page 21: Cognitive reference point Reporter : Sherry Professor : Daphne Yuan

Reference-point constructions in Cognitive Grammar

• Possessives• Deixis• Metonymy• Further applications

Page 22: Cognitive reference point Reporter : Sherry Professor : Daphne Yuan

Possessives

Figure 2.1. Reference-point relation.C – conceptualiser, R – reference point,D – dominion, T – target (Langacker 2001: 21)

a reference point is a cognitively salient item that gives mental access to a less salient target. The set of possible targets that can be accessed through a particular reference point is called dominion.

Page 23: Cognitive reference point Reporter : Sherry Professor : Daphne Yuan

Possessives

Figure 2.1. Reference-point relation.C – conceptualiser, R –girl,D – dominion, T – neck

Therefore, the girl’s neck is felicitous and the neck’s girl is odd.

Page 24: Cognitive reference point Reporter : Sherry Professor : Daphne Yuan

Possessives

• One of the current topical issues is the status of the reference point with respect to the target.

• An important contribution of the reference-point approach to the study of possessives is that it provides a unified account of numerous relations expressed by means of a possessive construction. (ownership, kinship, part-whole, agent process, experience-happening relationship)

Page 25: Cognitive reference point Reporter : Sherry Professor : Daphne Yuan

Topic construction

• extends the reference-point model from the analysis of possessives to a wider range of grammatical phenomena that calls reference-point constructions. One of these is a topic construction.

• Example :Consider the following example from Japanese:(1)sakana wa tai ga oisiifish TOP red.snapper SUBJ delicious

(2) On the table sat a nervous calico cat

Page 26: Cognitive reference point Reporter : Sherry Professor : Daphne Yuan

Deixis

• The function of a deictic word in specifying its referent in a giving context.

(3) Ted scratched his nose, and so did Jimmy.

(4) # He saw a skunk near Ralph. (5) # Near Ralph, he saw a skunk

anaphoric relation

Pronouns, are usually interpreted in the context of the dominion specified by the nominal subject.

Page 27: Cognitive reference point Reporter : Sherry Professor : Daphne Yuan

Metonymy

• the entity that is normally designated by a metonymic expression serves as a reference point affording mental access to the desired target.

• (6) She bought Lakoff and Johnson, used and in paper, for just, $1.50

• (7) The dog bit the cat.

• (8) Don is likely to leave.

teeth

Ref. point

easily provide a mental path to a target

Page 28: Cognitive reference point Reporter : Sherry Professor : Daphne Yuan

Cognitive status of reference-point constructions

• are we dealing with the same cognitive phenomenon or with different phenomena referred to by the same term – reference points?

• In the third place, the crucial feature of a reference-point relationship on both the Roschean and the Langackerian account is the asymmetry between CRPs and non-CRPs.

• In the second place, defined CRPs as cognitively salient items that other items are seen in relation to.

• In the first place, places reference-point constructions in the same group of phenomena.

Page 29: Cognitive reference point Reporter : Sherry Professor : Daphne Yuan

Reference points in lexical semantics _Round numbers

• Most prominent numbers are likely to be used in approximative expressions, such as There were thirty to forty birds in the tree.

• Approximatives usually involve round numbers, such as 10, 20, 25, 50, and 100.

Page 30: Cognitive reference point Reporter : Sherry Professor : Daphne Yuan

Reference points in lexical semantics _Spatial vocabularies

• Using the notion of reference points is the investigation of spatial vocabularies.

• Languages differ in how they code the relation between a target object and a reference point.

vanuit : ‘out of’ signals the presence of contact with the reference point at the initial state of the target,

tot bij : ‘until, as far as’ codes resulting proximity without contact

Page 31: Cognitive reference point Reporter : Sherry Professor : Daphne Yuan

Reference points in lexical semantics _Prototypes

• Prototypes may indeed be taken as a prime example of reference points providing mental access to less salient, non-prototypical entities.

Page 32: Cognitive reference point Reporter : Sherry Professor : Daphne Yuan

Summary

• Cognitive reference points have been shown to play a major role in various aspects of human cognition.

• Despite the growing interest of psychologists in reference-point reasoning, the notion of CRPs has generated relatively little interest in linguistics.

• In this thesis, I will elaborate the CRP model by extrapolating it to cognitive lexical semantics.