Evidence for a Shared Instrument Prototype from English, Dutch, and German

Published on May 6, 2022

Just as a catchy tune needs different instruments to create harmony, our brains use abstract categories to make sense of events. Researchers wondered if the concept of ‘Instrument’ is also encoded in our minds, like the key ingredient in a recipe. To find out, they asked people who speak English, Dutch, and German to describe events and judge the acceptability of sentences involving different instruments. The results showed that these languages share a common understanding of the ‘Instrument’ category. However, there was no concrete proof that tools are at the core of this category. Instead, it seems that our brains consider intentional agents as the most typical exemplar. This study supports the idea that thematic roles (like Agent and Patient) are analyzed based on prototypes, providing new pathways for exploring how language and thought interact.

Abstract
At conceptual and linguistic levels of cognition, events are said to be represented in terms of abstract categories, for example, the sentence Jackie cut the bagel with a knife encodes the categories Agent (i.e., Jackie) and Patient (i.e., the bagel). In this paper, we ask whether entities such as the knife are also represented in terms of such a category (often labeled “Instrument”) and, if so, whether this category has a prototype structure. We hypothesized the Proto-instrument is a tool: a physical object manipulated by an intentional agent to affect a change in another individual or object. To test this, we asked speakers of English, Dutch, and German to complete an event description task and a sentence acceptability judgment task in which events were viewed with more or less prototypical instruments. We found broad similarities in how English, Dutch, and German partition the semantic space of instrumental events, suggesting there is a shared concept of the Instrument category. However, there was no evidence to support the specific hypothesis that tools are the core of the Instrument category—instead, our results suggest the most prototypical Instrument is the direct extension of an intentional agent. This paper supports theoretical frameworks where thematic roles are analyzed in terms of prototypes and suggests new avenues of research on how instrumental category structure differs across linguistic and conceptual domains.

Read Full Article (External Site)

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You may use these HTML tags and attributes:

<a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <s> <strike> <strong>