"An excellent volume for bringing readers up to date with recent
developments.... Language and Space can be considered a
blueprint that should guide the future research in this area for years
to come."
-- Laura A. Carlson-Radvansky, Contemporary
Psychology
The study of the relationship between natural language and spatial
cognition has the potential to yield answers to vexing questions about
the nature of the mind, language, and culture. The fifteen original
contributions in Language and Space bring together the
most important theoretical viewpoints in the areas of psychology,
linguistics, anthropology, and neuroscience, providing a much needed
synthesis across these diverse domains. Chapters address such
questions as: How does the brain represent space, how do we learn to
talk about space, and should experimental tests of the relations
between space and language be restricted to closed-class linguistic
elements or must the role of open-class elements be considered as
well?
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