Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
35 years of Cognitive Linguistics Session 6: Frame semantics Martin Hilpert your questions semantic valence valency • Verbs typically impose restrictions on the kinds of structures that can occur with them: – – – – – – John devoured the pizza. * John devoured. John handed Bob a muffin. * John handed Bob. / * John handed. John admitted his mistake to Bob. * John admitted. / * John admitted to Bob. semantic valency • What participants are evoked by a verb? – devour: eater, something eaten – hand: giver, taker, something that is given – admit: admitter, something admitted, listener syntactic valency • Which participants have to be expressed? – devour: subject, object – hand: subject, indirect object, direct object – admit: subject, direct object, (oblique object) • Sometimes semantic valency ≠ syntactic valency – John admitted his mistake. – John ate and ate. case frames case frames • characteristic of a verb, pairing of syntactic and semantic valency • an example: open – the AGENT who performs the opening action, expressed as subject – the PATIENT who undergoes the opening action, expressed as direct object – the INSTRUMENT with which the opening action is performed, expressed as an oblique object • verbs may have several different case frames case frames • case frames often occur with groups of semantically related verbs – AGENT, THEME, LOCATION • put: I put the book on the shelf. • kick: Mary kicked the ball into the goal. • sweep: John swept the crumbs into the corner. – AGENT, RECIPIENT, THEME • give: John gave Mary the book. • promise: You promised me a horse. • send: They sent us an email. case grammar case grammar • ‘normal’ definition of case: morphological marking on nominal elements, indicating distinctions such as subject and object • case in case grammar: the semantic role of a nominal in a sentence (agent, patient, theme, instrument, ...), sometimes called ‘deep case’ • central claim of case grammar: every verb projects a set of participants that have a particular role (a case frame) • knowledge of verbal case frames allows you to understand ‘who did what to whom’ when you hear a sentence case grammar • initial ideas of ‘Case Grammar’: – a limited number of ‘deep cases’ (Agent, Patient, Recipient, etc.) as an inventory of semantic roles – a limited number of case frames (transitive, ditransitive, causative, etc.) • later development of this idea: – verb-specific roles (‘giver’ for the verb ‘give’, ‘hitter’ for ‘hit’, etc.), generalizations over those roles – We’ll get to this when we talk about CxG What do frame semantics and prototype theory have in common? frame semantics and prototype theory • both reject ‘checklist’ theories of meaning – no necessary and sufficient features • both stress the experiential basis of meaning – your experience with the world influences your understanding of what a given word means • frames are prototypes of common situations – breakfast – marriage – a university lecture What are ‘the framing words’ in a text? Are there non-framing words? frame-evoking elements • elements that you cannot understand without reference to a frame – penalty shot >> soccer – divorce >> marriage – thumb >> hand – hypotenuse >> right-angled triangle • Are there elements that do NOT depend on frames or do NOT evoke frames? non-frame-evoking elements • items with very general grammatical meanings – that: I know that. – to: I’d like to see that movie. • items that resonate with a frame that is already active – We went to the chicken house to collect the eggs. – We’ll have a BBQ and make a few burgers. What about that carpenter? • In particular, certain scholars insist on a distinction between purely semantic information about words and encyclopedic information about the designata of words. Somebody holding this view might expect to be able to justify certain characteristics of carpenters (or the concept carpenter) as belonging to the semantic category of the noun, other distinct characteristics of carpenters as simply being true of the individuals who satisfy the criteria associated with the category. semantic vs. encyclopedic information • dictionaries: – the most economic description that allows you to understand a concept • encyclopedias: – a rich array of information, not limited to what is strictly necessary • Frame semantics assumes that human knowledge of word meaning is encyclopedic, rather than dictionary-like How has frame semantics evolved since its development, and how ‘popular’ is it nowadays? frame semantics Defining word meanings: the “essential features” approach • • • • MAN WOMAN BOY GIRL [+human] [+adult] [+male] [+human] [+adult] [–male] [+human] [–adult] [+male] [+human] [–adult] [–male] “Checklist” theory of word meaning Word meaning is defined by a set of semantic features These features are necessary and sufficient As long as all features are present, every instance of the category is equally representative define game • What are the defining features of a game? – – – – opponents played for fun winners and losers you need luck, skills define lie • Someone says something – – – – that is false that the speaker believes to be false in order to deceive someone else OED: “a false statement made with intent to deceive” • Is this a lie? – Mary is leaving the house to buy John’s Christmas present: • J: Mary, where are you going? • M: We’re out of milk. (They actually are out of milk.) – not false – speaker does not believe it to be false – yet the speech act is deliberately misleading a solution: prototypes a persistent problem • In talking about prototypes, we still work with ‘features’ that can be present or absent. – The prototype has all of the typical features, peripheral members do not have all of the features. • Many everyday words are very hard to define in terms of bundles of features. • Rather, definitions of those words need to make reference to situations in which those words are used – so-called frames. define discount define discount • When a seller allows a buyer to buy goods at a reduced price, the difference between the normal price and the new price is called the discount. define discount • When a seller allows a buyer to buy goods at a reduced price, the difference between the normal price and the new price is called the discount. define discount • When a seller allows a buyer to buy goods at a reduced price, the difference between the normal price and the new price is called the discount. • The COMMERCIAL SCENARIO frame define discount • When a seller allows a buyer to buy goods at a reduced price, the difference between the normal price and the new price is called the discount. • The word discount can only be understood against the background of a commercial exchange of money and goods. • If you don’t have the frame, you don’t understand the word! • Test cricket is a game that spans over two innings. This means that one team needs to bowl the other team out twice and score more runs then them to win the match. In test cricket there is no limit to the innings length. Whereas in one day cricket & Twenty20 cricket there are a certain amount of overs per innings. Before the game begins an official will toss a coin. The captain who guesses the correct side of the coin will then choose if they want to bat or field first. • Test cricket is a game that spans over two innings. This means that one team needs to bowl the other team out twice and score more runs then them to win the match. In test cricket there is no limit to the innings length. Whereas in one day cricket & Twenty20 cricket there are a certain amount of overs per innings. Before the game begins an official will toss a coin. The captain who guesses the correct side of the coin will then choose if they want to bat or field first. Semantic frames • The meaning of many linguistic forms is impossible to define on the basis of features, however conceived. • Frame Semantics is an approach to the study of meaning that characterizes the meaning of words as relative to a semantic frame. • Frames are recurrent events or situations, pieces of procedural cultural knowledge (what happens when) – – – – commercial exchange going to a restaurant working a day job football How do words get their meanings? They denote parts of frames. Word meanings denote parts of frames • The meaning of Friday is a part of the frame week, which is a part of the frame Roman Calendar system. – In the Roman Calendar system, the passage of time is divided into seven-day intervals, the fifth day of these intervals is called Friday. • The meaning of vacation is a part of the frame work life. – In work life, people carry out activities for which they are paid. They have the right to interrupt these activities for some time of the year and often use this time for travel to another place, commonly with friends and family. • The meaning of penalty shot is a part of the frame football – In football, an offence may be penalized by giving the opponent team the possibility to aim a shot at the goal from a certain distance. For that shot, the time of the game is stopped and until the shot is carried out only the goalkeeper may defend the goal. Frame semantics – a semantics of understanding • What do hearers have to know in order to understand a word or a sentence? – Understanding vacation necessitates some familiarity with the concept of work life – Understanding hypotenuse is impossible without knowledge of what a right-angled triangle is. – Understanding what it means to bowl out the other team requires you to know how cricket is played. Words evoke frames • Julia will open her presents after she has blown out the candles. • Frame: birthday – – – – – a person has a date of birth this date is celebrated each year, usually with family and friends the person receives presents the person receives a cake there are candles on birthday cakes, the number of which often corresponds to the number of years the person has lived – the person is entitled to blowing out those candles Words evoke frames • I corrected the exams on the train. – … that took me where I wanted to go – … not on a train that was being stationed on a spare track! (Cf. I corrected the exams sitting in a train) • Frame: public transport – – – – people use means of public transport to get to places they pay money to receive a ticket which entitles them to a seat there are stops where people may get on and off while using those means of public transport people can engage in recreational or professional activities Knowledge of frames allows people to understand words frame-dependent words • the frame of football – goal, offside, penalty shot, referee, goalie, corner, foul • the frame of marriage – wedding, bride, best man, engagement, divorce, alimony, widow, gay marriage • the frame of hand – knuckle, thumb, index, palm, pinkie frames and their elements (FEs) – going to a restaurant • • • • • • customer waiter food and drink check exchange of money tip – commercial transaction • • • • seller buyer goods exchange of money frames and their elements • What are the frame elements of cure? frames and their elements • What are the frame elements of cure? – patient – disease – (healer) – (treatment) • Doctor Smith cured Frank of his depression with acupuncture. frames and their elements • What are the frame elements of smuggle? frames and their elements • What are the frame elements of smuggle? – perpetrator – goods – goal – (source) – (path) • Frank smuggled drugs into the prison. highlighting different parts of frames • What are the frame elements of smuggle? – perpetrator – goods – goal – (source) – (path) • • • • Frank smuggled drugs into the prison. More and more drugs are smuggled out of Brazil. The drugs were smuggled through a narrow tunnel. The tunnel was used for smuggling. Frames impose a perspective on an event frames and perspectivization • The same event may be presented in ways that incorporates a different perspective on it: • John sold the book to Mary for $100. • Mary bought the book from John for $100. • Mary paid John $100 for the book. • John collected $100 for the book from Mary. frames and perspectivization • The verbs buy and sell evoke the same frame (commercial transaction), but they differ in their portrayal of the participants: – buy: the buyer is the AGENT, i.e. active and controlling the event – sell: the seller is the AGENT, i.e. active and controlling the event frames and perspectivization • Compare: – In ten minutes we will reach the coast. – In ten minutes we will reach the shore. – That day Captain Miller stayed on land. – That day Captain Miller stayed on the ground. • Imagine that Switzerland is preparing for the outbreak of an unusual disease, which is expected to kill 600 people. Two alternative programs to combat the disease have been proposed. The exact scientific estimates of the consequences of the programs are as follows. • Program A: 200 people will be saved • Program B: There is a 1/3 probability that 600 people will be saved, and a 2/3 probability that no people will be saved. • Imagine that Switzerland is preparing for the outbreak of an unusual disease, which is expected to kill 600 people. Two alternative programs to combat the disease have been proposed. The exact scientific estimates of the consequences of the programs are as follows. • Program A: 200 people will be saved 80% • Program B: There is a 1/3 probability that 600 people will be saved, and a 2/3 probability that no people will be saved. 20% • Imagine that Switzerland is preparing for the outbreak of an unusual disease, which is expected to kill 600 people. Two alternative programs to combat the disease have been proposed. The exact scientific estimates of the consequences of the programs are as follows. • Program A: 400 people will die. • Program B: There is a 1/3 probability that nobody will die, and a 2/3 probability that 600 people will die. • Imagine that Switzerland is preparing for the outbreak of an unusual disease, which is expected to kill 600 people. Two alternative programs to combat the disease have been proposed. The exact scientific estimates of the consequences of the programs are as follows. • Program A: 400 people will die. 20% • Program B: There is a 1/3 probability that nobody will die, and a 2/3 probability that 600 people will die. 80% • Program A: 200 people will be saved • Program A: 400 people will die. • Program B: There is a 1/3 probability that 600 people will be saved, and a 2/3 probability that no people will be saved. • Program B: There is a 1/3 probability that nobody will die, and a 2/3 probability that 600 people will die. The saving frame Priority: if you can save at least some of the people, do that The death frame Priority: if there is a chance to avoid deaths, take it Frames reflect cultural practices Frames and cultural practices • The recurrent situations that shape our daily lives are pieces of our cultural environment – – – – – – marriage football vs. baseball work life using public transportation going to a restaurant taking out liability insurance Frames and cultural practices • identity theft Frames and cultural practices • identity theft – a victim: a person whose identity is assumed by a perpetrator – a perpetrator: a person who assumes another person’s identity by presenting a means of identification, usually to obtain assets – a means of identification: an identifying number, such as social security number, credit card number, etc. – assets: money and goods belonging to the victim Basic syntactic patterns reflect basic semantic frames Frames and grammatical constructions • Some sentence patterns of English reflect basic semantic frames • Example: the ditransitive construction – – – – – SUBJ VERB OBJ1 OBJ2 John gave Mary a cookie John taught Mary French John faxed Mary the news John bequeathed Mary a gold watch • Evidence: ditransitives with new verbs – Grandma crutched Mary the ball Frames are culturally contested Frames are culturally contested • How do politicians talk about taxation? • ‘tax relief’ – – – – – tax is a burden there is a protagonist (the taxpayer) who carries that burden politicians have the power to make the burden lighter politicians give the protagonist relief anyone trying to stop the politician from reducing taxes is acting against the protagonist • elements of taxation that are not represented in the frame: – benefits that come from taxation (universities, roads, …) – taxes as investments into future well-being Summary 1. Words evoke frames, denote parts of frames – bride denotes an important participant of marriage 2. Knowledge of frames allows us to understand words – words get their meanings from frames – hypotenuse does not make any sense without knowledge of triangle 3. Frames impose a particular perspective on a situation – In ten minutes we’ll reach the shore / the coast. 4. Frames often reflect cultural practices – marriage, football, the Roman calendar 5. Basic sentence patterns of English reflect semantic frames – the ditransitive construction 6. Frames are culturally contested – tax relief next time: usage-based linguistics How does your daily experience with language shape your knowledge of language? Grammar is grammar and usage is usage From usage to grammar: the mind’s response to repetition See you next time! [email protected]