Brown Penelope
Language Acquisition Department, Max Planck Institute for Psycholinguistics Nijmegen, Netherlands.
Front Psychol. 2012 Jul 9;3:212. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2012.00212. eCollection 2012.
Linguistic expressions of time often draw on spatial language, which raises the question of whether cultural specificity in spatial language and cognition is reflected in thinking about time. In the Mayan language Tzeltal, spatial language relies heavily on an absolute frame of reference utilizing the overall slope of the land, distinguishing an "uphill/downhill" axis oriented from south to north, and an orthogonal "crossways" axis (sunrise-set) on the basis of which objects at all scales are located. Does this absolute system for calculating spatial relations carry over into construals of temporal relations? This question was explored in a study where Tzeltal consultants produced temporal expressions and performed two different non-linguistic temporal ordering tasks. The results show that at least five distinct schemata for conceptualizing time underlie Tzeltal linguistic expressions: (i) deictic ego-centered time, (ii) time as an ordered sequence (e.g., "first"/"later"), (iii) cyclic time (times of the day, seasons), (iv) time as spatial extension or location (e.g., "entering/exiting July"), and (v) a time vector extending uphillwards into the future. The non-linguistic task results showed that the "time moves uphillwards" metaphor, based on the absolute frame of reference prevalent in Tzeltal spatial language and thinking and important as well in the linguistic expressions for time, is not strongly reflected in responses on these tasks. It is argued that systematic and consistent use of spatial language in an absolute frame of reference does not necessarily transfer to consistent absolute time conceptualization in non-linguistic tasks; time appears to be more open to alternative construals.
时间的语言表达常常借鉴空间语言,这就引发了一个问题:空间语言和认知中的文化特异性是否体现在对时间的思考中。在玛雅语泽尔塔尔语中,空间语言严重依赖于一种绝对参照系,该参照系利用土地的整体坡度,区分出一条从南到北的“上坡/下坡”轴,以及一条与之正交的“横向”轴(日出 - 日落),并在此基础上确定各种尺度的物体位置。这种计算空间关系的绝对系统是否会延伸到对时间关系的理解中呢?在一项研究中探讨了这个问题,该研究让泽尔塔尔语使用者生成时间表达,并执行两项不同的非语言时间排序任务。结果表明,至少有五种不同的时间概念化模式构成了泽尔塔尔语语言表达的基础:(i)指示性的以自我为中心的时间,(ii)作为有序序列的时间(例如,“第一”/“之后”),(iii)循环时间(一天中的时间、季节),(iv)作为空间延伸或位置的时间(例如,“进入/离开七月”),以及(v)向上延伸到未来的时间向量。非语言任务的结果表明,基于泽尔塔尔语空间语言和思维中普遍存在的绝对参照系且在时间语言表达中也很重要的“时间向上移动”隐喻,在这些任务的回答中并未得到强烈体现。有人认为,在绝对参照系中系统且一致地使用空间语言并不一定会转化为非语言任务中一致的绝对时间概念化;时间似乎更容易有不同的理解方式。