Reference frames in language and cognition: cross-population mismatches

Author:

Bohnemeyer Jürgen1ORCID,Danziger Eve2,Lum Jonathon3ORCID,Alshehri Ali1,Benedicto Elena4,Blythe Joe5,Cerqueglini Letizia6ORCID,Donelson Katharine7,Eggleston Alyson8,Gaby Alice9,Lin Yen-Ting10ORCID,Moore Randi1,Nikitina Tatiana11,Stoakes Hywel3,Yulbarangyang Balna Mayangna12

Affiliation:

1. University at Buffalo – The State University of New York , Buffalo , USA

2. University of Virginia , Charlottesville , USA

3. University of Melbourne , Melbourne , Australia

4. Purdue University , West Lafayette , USA

5. Macquarie University , Sydney , Australia

6. Tel Aviv University , Tel Aviv , Israel

7. University of Nevada , Reno , USA

8. The Citadel Military College of South Carolina , Charleston , USA

9. Monash University , Melbourne , Australia

10. Taiwan Ministry of Science and Technology , Taipei , Taiwan

11. CNRS , LLACAN , Paris , France

12. IPILC-Universidad URACCAN , Las Minas , Nicaragua

Abstract

Abstract Numerous studies have found evidence of a speech community’s referential practices in discourse being predictive of its members’ behavior in nonverbal tasks. In this article, we discuss a series of exceptions to this alignment pattern, drawing on data from eleven populations of Asia, Europe, the Middle East, North and Central America, and Oceania. These exceptions have not been discussed in conjunction with one another and the striking commonalities across the findings of these studies have gone unnoticed: (a) in discourses referring to small-scale space, either intrinsic frame use is dominant or both relative and geocentric frames are used frequently in addition to intrinsic frames; and (b) in recall/recognition memory, geocentric coding is more common than egocentric coding (in tasks that involve stationary stimulus configurations) in nine of the populations, while in the remaining two, there is evidence of extensive intrinsic coding even in nonverbal cognition. We discuss these findings in light of Haun’s innate geocentrism hypothesis (Haun, D. B. M., C. Rapold, J. Call, G. Janzen & S. C. Levinson. 2006. Cognitive cladistics and cultural override in hominid spatial cognition. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 103(46). 17568–17573). Our data offers partial support for this hypothesis, but simultaneously calls into question whether any extrinsic reference frames are available innately.

Publisher

Walter de Gruyter GmbH

Subject

Linguistics and Language,Language and Linguistics

Reference59 articles.

1. Alshehri, A., R. Moore, G. Pérez Báez & J. Bohnemeyer. 2018. The principle of canonical orientation: A crosslinguistic study. Language and Cognition 10(3). 494–513. https://doi.org/10.1017/langcog.2018.12.

2. Benedicto, E., A. C. Shettle & M. Y. Balna. 2016. Linguistic ideologies as a crucial factor in language revitalization: A look at the Mayangna languages of Nicaragua. In G. Pérez Báez, Ch. Rogers & J. E. Rosés Labrada (eds.), Latin American contexts for language documentation and revitalization, 305–344. Berlin: De Gruyter Mouton.

3. Blythe, J., K. C. Mardigan, M. E. Perdjert & H. Stoakes. 2016. Pointing out directions in Murrinhpatha. Open Linguistics 2(1). 132–159. https://doi.org/10.1515/opli-2016-0007.

4. Bohnemeyer, J. 2008a. Elicitation task: Frames of reference in discourse – The Ball & Chair pictures. In G. Pérez Báez (ed.), MesoSpace: Spatial language and cognition in Mesoamerica – 2008 field manual. Unpublished manuscript. University at Buffalo – SUNY. Available at: http://www.acsu.buffalo.edu/∼jb77/MesoSpaceManual2008.pdf.

5. Bohnemeyer, J. 2008b. Elicitation task: Frames of reference in recall memory – New Animals. In G. Pérez Báez (ed.), MesoSpace: Spatial language and cognition in Mesoamerica – 2008 field manual. Unpublished manuscript. University at Buffalo – SUNY. Available at: http://www.acsu.buffalo.edu/∼jb77/MesoSpaceManual2008.pdf.

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