Aspectuality across languages : event construal in speech and gesture /

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Bibliographic Details
Corporate Author: ProQuest (Firm)
Format: Electronic eBook
Language:English
Published: Amsterdam : John Benjamins B.V., [2018]
Series:Human cognitive processing ; v. 62.
Subjects:
Online Access:Connect to this title online (unlimited simultaneous users allowed; 325 uses per year)

MARC

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245 0 0 |a Aspectuality across languages :  |b event construal in speech and gesture /  |c edited by Alan Cienki, Olga K. Iriskhanova. 
264 1 |a Amsterdam :  |b John Benjamins B.V.,  |c [2018] 
264 4 |c ©2018 
300 |a 1 online resource. 
336 |a text  |b txt  |2 rdacontent 
337 |a computer  |b c  |2 rdamedia 
338 |a online resource  |b cr  |2 rdacarrier 
490 1 |a Human cognitive processing,  |x 1387-6724 ;  |v v. 62 
504 |a Includes bibliographical references and index. 
505 0 0 |a Machine generated contents note:   |g 1.  |t Introduction --   |g 2.  |t Semantics approached from the perspective of conceptualization and mental simulation --   |g 3.  |t Beyond language -- visible action expressing conceptualization --   |g 4.  |t main research questions --   |g ch. 1   |t Aspect through the lens of event construal --   |g 1.  |t On events and aspect --   |g 1.1.  |t Events: An historical and philosophical overview --   |g 1.1.1.  |t Events as phenomena on the levels of cognition, language, and communication (Iriskhanova) --   |g 1.1.2.  |t Various approaches to the study of events in philosophy (Iriskhanova) --   |g 1.1.3.  |t Various approaches to the study of events in linguistics (Iriskhanova) --   |g 1.1.4.  |t Studying the internal structure of event construal: Points in common from philosophy and linguistics (Iriskhanova) --   |g 1.1.5.  |t Recent cognitive linguistic approaches (Cienki) --   |g 1.1.5.1.  |t Background on construal in cognitive linguistics --   |g 1.1.5.2.  |t Imaging systems in language --   |g 1.1.5.3.  |t Construal in cognitive grammar --   |g 1.1.5.4.  |t Looking ahead --   |g 1.2.  |t Aspect across traditions: Main lines of research (Iriskhanova, Morgenstern, Muller, Richter) --   |g 1.2.1.  |t Aspect -- Aktionsart -- Vid -- Aspectuality --   |g 1.2.2.  |t Early studies of aspect in French, German, and Russian linguistics --   |g 1.2.3.  |t Present-day studies of aspect: Some specific issues --   |g 1.2.4.  |t Present-day studies of aspect: Points of convergence --   |g 1.2.4.1.  |t influence of Anglo-American theories of aspect: Blurring grammatical and lexical aspect --   |g 1.2.4.2.  |t Using conceptual boundaries --   |g 1.2.5.  |t Conclusion --   |g 2.  |t Background on talk-based multimodal communication --   |g 2.1.  |t Thinking for speaking and gesturing (Cienki) --   |g 2.1.1.  |t Linguistic relativity hypothesis --   |g 2.1.2.  |t Thinking for speaking --   |g 2.2.  |t Gestures as movement --   |g 2.2.1.  |t Visual and proprioceptive modalities --   |g 2.2.1.1.  |t Gestures derive from imagistic thinking (Boutet) --   |g 2.2.1.2.  |t Visual perception of gestures (Boutet) --   |g 2.2.1.3.  |t importance of proprioception (Boutet) --   |g 2.2.1.4.  |t `Gain control' (Becker) --   |g 2.2.2.  |t Gestures as motion events (Muller) --   |g 2.2.3.  |t Introducing the notion of boundary schemas (Muller) --   |g 2.3.  |t Summing up: Aspect as amodal or as modality-dependent (Boutet, Morgenstern, Cienki) --   |g ch. 2   |t Researching aspect in multimodal communication: Consequences for data and methods --   |g 1.  |t Introduction (Cienki) --   |g 2.  |t choice of data and method of elicitation for the production studies (Cienki, Becker) --   |g 3.  |t Categories used for the analysis of event construal in spoken language (Cienki) --   |g 4.  |t Categories used for the analysis of event construal in gesture --   |g 4.1.  |t Features for the gesture phases: Determining the unit of analysis (Boutet, Muller) --   |g 4.2.  |t Pulse of effort as a kinesiological criterion (Boutet) --   |g 4.3.  |t Bounded and unbounded schemas (Boutet, Muller) --   |g 5.  |t Bringing it all together: Annotation and coding (Boutet, Morgenstern) --   |g 5.1.  |t Choice of controlled vocabulary --   |g 5.2.  |t Choice of the type of template and hierarchy --   |g ch. 3   |t Speakers' verbal expression of event construal: Quantitative and qualitative analyses --   |g 1.  |t Introduction: Construal of events in spoken narrative (Iriskhanova) --   |g 1.1.  |t Basic features of narrative discourse --   |g 1.2.  |t Basic features of spoken narratives --   |g 1.3.  |t Some preliminary remarks on the textual data --   |g 2.  |t French speakers' verbal expression of event construal (Morgenstern, Boutet, Debras) --   |g 2.1.  |t Background on the uses of tenses in narratives --   |g 2.2.  |t Quantitative analyses --   |g 2.3.  |t Qualitative analyses --   |g 2.3.1.  |t Difference between the passe compose and the imparfait --   |g 2.3.2.  |t Use of the present tense in narratives --   |g 2.3.3.  |t Alternation between imparfait, present simple, and passe compose --   |g 2.4.  |t Concluding remarks --   |g 3.  |t German speakers' verbal expression of event construal (Muller) --   |g 3.1.  |t Introduction: Specifics of aspectual event construal in tense forms in spoken German --   |g 3.2.  |t Quantitative analyses: Use of Prateritum and Perfekt in spoken German as compared to French use of imparfait and passe compose --   |g 3.3.  |t Qualitative analyses: The use of Prateritum and Perfekt in spoken German --   |g 3.4.  |t Discussion --   |g 4.  |t Russian speakers' verbal expression of event construal (Denisova, Iriskhanova) --   |g 4.1.  |t Introducing general specifics of tense and aspect use in spoken Russian narratives --   |g 4.2.  |t Quantitative analysis: General results for Russian verbs --   |g 4.3.  |t Qualitative analyses of Russian verbs --   |g 4.3.1.  |t Some preliminary remarks on the specifics of Russian spoken narratives --   |g 4.3.2.  |t Tense and aspect as related to the specifics of spoken narratives --   |g 4.3.3.  |t Semantic features of verbs as related to the specifics of spoken narratives --   |g 4.3.4.  |t Structural features of verbs as related to the specifics of spoken narratives --   |g 4.4.  |t Concluding remarks --   |g 5.  |t Summary (Iriskhanova) --   |g ch. 4   |t Speakers' gestural expression of event construal: Quantitative and qualitative analyses --   |g 1.  |t Introduction (Boutet, Morgenstern, Cienki) --   |g 1.1.  |t Choice of the coding protocol for gesture analysis --   |g 1.2.  |t Inter-coder reliability --   |g 1.3.  |t Category-specific particularities --   |g 1.4.  |t Summing up --   |g 2.  |t French speakers' gestural expression of event construal (Boutet, Morgenstern) --   |g 2.1.  |t Introduction: Hypothesis for French --   |g 2.2.  |t Boundary schemas in French gestures --   |g 2.2.1.  |t Quantitative results --   |g 2.2.2.  |t Qualitative analyses --   |g 2.2.3.  |t Counterexamples: The role of lexical aspect and the multi-functionality of gestures --   |g 2.3.  |t Conclusion --   |g 3.  |t German (Muller) --   |g 3.1.  |t Introduction: Hypothesis for German --   |g 3.2.  |t Results of boundary schema analysis for German --   |g 3.2.1.  |t Quantitative results --   |g 3.2.2.  |t Qualitative analyses --   |g 3.2.2.1.  |t Use of bounded gestures with Perfekt and unbounded gestures with Prateritum --   |g 3.2.2.2.  |t Some reasons for the distribution of bounded and unbounded gestures with the Prateritum --   |g 3.3.  |t Discussion: German as a complex case --   |g 4.  |t Russian (Denisova, Iriskhanova, Cienki) --   |g 4.1.  |t Introduction: Hypothesis for Russian --   |g 4.2.  |t Results of boundary schema analysis for Russian --   |g 4.2.1.  |t Quantitative results --   |g 4.2.2.  |t Additional factors analyzed qualitatively and quantitatively --   |g 4.2.2.1.  |t Preliminary analysis --   |g 4.2.2.2.  |t In-depth analysis --   |g 4.2.2.3.  |t Results and discussion --   |g 4.3.  |t Conclusion --   |g 5.  |t Summary (Cienki, Muller) --   |g ch. 5   |t Looking ahead: Kinesiological analysis (Boutet, Morgenstern, Cienki) --   |g 1.  |t Initial main concepts --   |g 1.1.  |t Segments --   |g 1.2.  |t Degrees of freedom --   |g 2.  |t kinesiological view of gesture --   |g 2.1.  |t Intrinsically multiple frames of reference --   |g 2.2.  |t geometry associated with space --   |g 2.3.  |t Dynamics --   |g 3.  |t Movement (motor) control from a kinesiological perspective --   |g 3.1.  |t Velocity in relation to shape --   |g 3.2.  |t opposition of phase law --   |g 3.3.  |t principle of isochrony --   |g 3.4.  |t Codman's paradox --   |g 3.5.  |t Types of motion transfer --   |g 3.6.  |t Discussion --   |g 4.  |t Case study: Kinesiological analysis of the French gesture data --   |g 4.1.  |t Propagation flow and perfectivity --   |g 4.2.  |t Number and type of segments and perfectivity --   |g 4.3.  |t Qualitative analyses --   |g 5.  |t Discussion --   |g ch. 6   |t Comprehension of event construal from multimodal communication (Becker, Gonzalez-Marquez) --   |g 1.  |t Approaches in psychology --   |g 1.1.  |t Psychology as a way of knowing --   |g 1.2.  |t Theories in cognitive psychology --   |g 1.2.1.  |t Situation models in discourse processing --   |g 1.2.1.1.  |t Event Indexing Model --   |g 1.2.1.2.  |t Dynamic View --   |g 1.2.2.  |t Event segmentation theory --   |g 2.  |t Background to the comprehension experiment --   |g 2.1.  |t Introduction to the comprehension experiment --   |g 2.2.  |t Hypotheses --   |g 3.  |t Methods --   |g 3.1.  |t Participants --   |g 3.2.  |t Materials --   |g 3.2.1.  |t Language background --   |g 3.2.2.  |t Video clips --   |g 3.2.3.  |t Program --   |g 3.3.  |t Procedure --   |g 4.  |t Results --   |g 4.1.  |t Reporting of results --   |g 4.2.  |t French --   |g 4.3.  |t German --   |g 4.4.  |t Russian --   |g 4.5.  |t Interim summary --   |g 4.6.  |t Combined analyses --   |g 5.  |t Discussion of combined analyses --   |g 6.  |t Conclusion --   |g 7.  |t Afterword: The need for interdisciplinary collaboration. 
533 |a Electronic reproduction.  |b Ann Arbor, MI  |n Available via World Wide Web. 
588 0 |a Print version record. 
650 0 |a Grammar, Comparative and general  |x Aspect. 
650 0 |a Grammar, Comparative and general  |x Syntax. 
650 0 |a Semantics. 
650 0 |a Events (Philosophy) 
710 2 |a ProQuest (Firm) 
776 0 8 |i Print version:  |t ASPECT ACROSS LANGUAGES.  |d [Place of publication not identified] : JOHN BENJAMINS, 2018  |z 9027201242 
830 0 |a Human cognitive processing ;  |v v. 62. 
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