Department of Psychology, University of Memphis, TN 38152, USA.
Cogn Sci. 2012 Nov-Dec;36(8):1556-69. doi: 10.1111/cogs.12000. Epub 2012 Oct 4.
Spatial mental representations can be derived from linguistic and non-linguistic sources of information. This study tested whether these representations could be formed from statistical linguistic frequencies of city names, and to what extent participants differed in their performance when they estimated spatial locations from language or maps. In a computational linguistic study, we demonstrated that co-occurrences of cities in Tolkien's Lord of the Rings trilogy and The Hobbit predicted the authentic longitude and latitude of those cities in Middle Earth. In a human study, we showed that human spatial estimates of the location of cities were very similar regardless of whether participants read Tolkien's texts or memorized a map of Middle Earth. However, text-based location estimates obtained from statistical linguistic frequencies better predicted the human text-based estimates than the human map-based estimates. These findings suggest that language encodes spatial structure of cities, and that human cognitive map representations can come from implicit statistical linguistic patterns, from explicit non-linguistic perceptual information, or from both.
空间心理表象可以从语言和非语言信息源中推导出来。本研究测试了这些表象是否可以从城市名称的统计语言频率中形成,以及参与者在从语言或地图估计空间位置时表现的差异程度。在一项计算语言学研究中,我们证明了在托尔金的《指环王》三部曲和《霍比特人》中城市的共同出现,预测了这些城市在中土世界中的真实经纬度。在一项人类研究中,我们表明,无论参与者阅读托尔金的文本还是记忆中土世界的地图,他们对城市位置的空间估计都非常相似。然而,基于统计语言频率的基于文本的位置估计比基于地图的人类估计更好地预测了基于文本的人类估计。这些发现表明,语言编码了城市的空间结构,而人类的认知地图表示可以来自隐含的统计语言模式、来自明确的非语言感知信息,或者两者兼而有之。