Description du projet
Comment les langues évoluent en intégrant les expériences vécues
Le langage est le moyen de communication des êtres humains, qu’il soit parlé ou écrit. Or, pour tenir compte des nouvelles idées et inventions, il se doit d’être en constante évolution. Afin de refléter nos expériences et l’évolution de nos vies et de nos cultures, ce ne sont pas seulement les mots qui changent, mais également la façon dont nous les utilisons. Le projet LexPex, financé par l’UE, approfondira la question suivante: notre architecture cognitive contribue-t-elle à limiter la variabilité du langage? Ce projet interdisciplinaire examinera comment les expériences de perception basiques, comme la vue, l’ouïe et l’odorat, sont codées par des verbes dans les différentes langues. Il tentera également de comprendre si les biais cognitifs façonnent certains aspects de ce champ lexical.
Objectif
Previous research suggests there may be underlying regularities in how languages encode perceptual experiences and in how perceptual language evolves over time. This points to the possibility that our cognitive architecture plays a role in constraining the variability in this domain of language. Substantiating this is highly relevant for the cognitive sciences, in light of recent proposals that many aspects of cognition may be more culture-specific than previously thought and that there are few, if any, universals of language. The present project takes up this goal by investigating how basic perceptual experiences (e.g. seeing, hearing, smelling) are encoded by verbs across languages and examining whether cognitive biases shape aspects of this lexical field. First, I will undertake a large-scale typological survey of perception verb lexicons to assess the extent to which they exhibit systematic patterns. Second, I will extend the search for regularities to the phylogenetic dimension, by examining whether perception verb vocabulary evolves along the same constrained pathways across three language families. Third, I will provide the first behavioural evidence to bear on the question of whether recurrent typological patterns in perception verb lexicons have their origins in cognitive biases, by conducting a novel artificial language learning experiment. This interdisciplinary project represents an ideal synergy between my research profile (linguistic typology, language change, psycholinguistics), the supervisor’s (Prof. Asifa Majid, cross-cultural psychology, word meaning) and that of the partner institution supervisor (Prof. Fiona Jordan, evolutionary and linguistic anthropology). Through its novel contribution to lexical typology, cognitive psychology, and language evolution, and by its advanced training in state-of-the-art technical skills, the project offers the ideal opportunity to relaunch my scientific career following a three-year hiatus raising two children.
Champ scientifique
Mots‑clés
Programme(s)
Régime de financement
MSCA-IF - Marie Skłodowska-Curie Individual Fellowships (IF)Coordinateur
OX1 2JD Oxford
Royaume-Uni