What can Neuroscience Tell us About Reference?

Berit Brogaard
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Abstract

In traditional formal semantics, reference, truth, and satisfaction are basic and representation is derivative and dispensable. Semantics in this traditional sense has no bearing on mental processing. Thus, cognitive neuroscience cannot provide any insights into the nature of reference. Unlike traditional semantics, dynamic semantic theories—such as discourse representation theory (DRT) —treat ever-growing, revisable mental representations as the basic semantic entities. New information may refer to previously introduced referents and discourse referents may refer to worldly entities. Because DRT treats mental representations as indispensable, evidence from neuroscience—particularly recording of electroencephalograms (EEG) and its derivative event-related potentials (ERPs)—can reasonably be thought to shed light on meaning and reference. This chapter first reviews the advantages of DRT in accommodating linguistic data and then reviews data from neuroscience that seem to support it. Finally, it considers methodological concerns that have been raised about the neuroscientific approach to semantics.
神经科学能告诉我们什么?
在传统的形式语义学中,指称、真、满足是基本的,表征是派生的、可有可无的。传统意义上的语义学与心理加工无关。因此,认知神经科学不能提供任何关于参考本质的见解。与传统语义学不同,动态语义学理论——如话语表征理论(DRT)——将不断增长的、可修正的心理表征作为基本的语义实体。新信息可以指以前引入的指称物,话语指称物可以指世界实体。因为DRT认为心理表征是不可或缺的,所以来自神经科学的证据——尤其是脑电图(EEG)及其衍生的事件相关电位(ERPs)的记录——可以合理地被认为阐明了意义和参考。本章首先回顾了DRT在容纳语言数据方面的优势,然后回顾了似乎支持它的神经科学数据。最后,它考虑了对语义学的神经科学方法提出的方法论问题。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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