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Review Articles

The role of conceptualization during language production: evidence from event encoding

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Pages 1117-1128 | Received 01 Oct 2018, Accepted 25 Feb 2019, Published online: 24 Apr 2019
 

ABSTRACT

As Pim Levelt proposed in Speaking, language production begins with the preverbal, conceptual apprehension of an event or state of affairs that the speaker intends to talk about. Despite the obvious importance of this process, relatively few studies to date have explored how conceptual representations are formed prior to speaking. Here we present a programme of research that tackles this question, focusing on the domain of events. Three key findings emerge. First, conceptual event structure shows important homologies with language. Second, given that event encoding differs across languages, the assembly of event representations prior to speaking varies cross-linguistically. Finally, conceptualising an event for purposes of communication depends not only on conceptual and linguistic factors but also on the pragmatic assessment of the needs and knowledge of the speaker’s conversational partner. We sketch implications of this integrated approach to event conceptualisation for future research on how thought is transformed into language.

Acknowledgement

Preparation of this article was supported by NSF grant #1632849 (A.P.). M.G. would like to acknowledge support from a Doctoral Fellowship from the University of Delaware. Both authors would like to thank Pim Levelt for inspiration and discussion, and the organisers and audience of IWLP 10 at the Max Planck Institute for Psycholinguistics at Nijmegen for helpful input.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.

Additional information

Funding

This research was supported by NSF Grant BCS-1632849 to Anna Papafragou.

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