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Mental models,pictures, and text: Integration of spatial and verbal information
Authors:Arthur M. Glenberg  Mark A. McDaniel
Affiliation:1. Department of Psychology, University of Wisconsin, 1202 West Johnson Street, 53706, Madison, WI
2. Psychology Department, Purdue University, 1364 Psychology Building, Room 3188, 47907-1364, West Lafayette, IN
Abstract:In the past several years, there has been an acceleration in the publication of cognitive research on the interplay between linguistic and pictorial/spatial information. To report on and encourage this sort of research, we organized a symposium at the 1991 meeting of the Midwestern Psychological Association. The articles in this special section ofMemory & Cognition are based on the work presented at the symposium. In this introduction, we offer a suggestion forwhy the integration of linguistic and spatial information is not only a possibility, but a requirement for effective communication. Our suggestion follows the linguistic analysis of the closed-class elements that convey spatial relations, the prepositions (Talmy, 1983). The structure of language provides but a small set of prepositions to encode the vast number of spatial relations that we can perceive. Thus, to understand a situation that a speaker or a writer is conveying, the listener or reader must combine linguistic information with (perhaps metric) spatial information derived from pictures, the environment, or memory.
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