Abstract

“How can perception be altered by language?” is the fundamental question of this article. Indeed, various studies have pointed out the influence of colour-related knowledge on object and colour perception, evoked by linguistic stimuli. Here the relevance of the simulationist approach is assumed in order to explain this influence, where the understanding of colour-related words or sentences involves a process of colour simulation that is supported by a neuronal network partially similar to the network involved in colour perception. Consequently, colour-related knowledge and colour perception can interact through a process of pattern interference. In support of this idea, studies are discussed showing priming effects between colour simulation and colour perception, but two limitations are also raised. Firstly, these works all used between-category colour discrimination tasks that allow the intervention of lexical processes that can also explain priming. Secondly, these works control the congruency link between prime and target at the level of ‘colour category’, and no demonstration is made of an influence at the level of specific hues. Consequently, the simulationist view of language/perception interactions seems an interesting way to thinking but more experimens are needed in order to overcome some limitations.

Highlights

  • For many years, perception was considered to be a process extracting information from the environment (Pylyshyn 1981; Fodor 1983)

  • We focus our attention on the influence of colour-related words on colour perception because this case of language/perception interaction is strongly supported empirically

  • Despite a slowdown of response times opposed to previous data, these results demonstrated the possibility that colour-related knowledge can influence colour perception

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Summary

Introduction

Perception was considered to be a process extracting information from the environment (Pylyshyn 1981; Fodor 1983). The aim of this article is to suggest a possible explanation of language/ perception interaction based on simulationist approach of memory retrieval. We present core ideas of sensorimotor models of memory including the simulationist conception of memory retrieval Based on this approach, we develop the possibility that colour-related words can influence colour perception because each recruits common neuronal substrate. We discuss recent neuro-imaging evidences supporting this major assumption Based on these studies, we specified this basic idea. In the last section (section 7), we sum up the potential simulationist explanation of language/perception interactions and develop two empirical ideas in order to best support this approach

Influences of Colour Related Knowledge
Colour Associations: A Stored Information
Influence on Perception of Coloured Objects
Influence on Colour Perception
Simulationist Approach of Cognition and Memory
Sensorimotor Models of Memory
Simulation Process of Retrieval
Colour Perception and Colour Simulation
Cortical Structures Involved in Colour Perception
Cortical Structures Involved in Colour Simulation
Achromatopsia with Preserved Colour Mental Imagery?
Overlap of Neural Networks
Bidirectional Priming between Colour Simulation and Colour Perception
Priming of Colour Perception by Colour Simulation
Priming of Colour Simulation by Colour Perception
Two Problems for the Simulationist Approach
Lexical Influence?
Simulation of Hues?
Findings
Conclusion
Full Text
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