Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
7286174 | Cognition | 2016 | 9 Pages |
Abstract
Human languages may be more than completely arbitrary symbolic systems. A growing literature supports sound symbolism, or the existence of consistent, intuitive relationships between speech sounds and specific concepts. Prior work establishes that these sound-to-meaning mappings can shape language-related judgments and decisions, but do their effects generalize beyond merely the linguistic and truly color how we navigate our environment? We examine this possibility, relating a predominant sound symbolic distinction (vowel frontness) to a novel associate (spatial proximity) in five studies. We show that changing one vowel in a label can influence estimations of distance, impacting judgment, perception, and action. The results (1) provide the first experimental support for a relationship between vowels and spatial distance and (2) demonstrate that sound-to-meaning mappings have outcomes that extend beyond just language and can - through a single sound - influence how we perceive and behave toward objects in the world.
Related Topics
Life Sciences
Neuroscience
Cognitive Neuroscience
Authors
Cristina D. Rabaglia, Sam J. Maglio, Madelaine Krehm, Jin H. Seok, Yaacov Trope,