Abstract

One of the most influential ideas within the domain of cognition is that of embodied cognition, in which the experienced world is the result of an interplay between an organism’s physiology, sensorimotor system, and its environment. An aspect of this idea is that linguistic information activates sensory representations automatically. For example, hearing the word ‘red’ would automatically activate sensory representations of this color. But does linguistic information prioritize access to awareness of congruent visual information? Here, we show that linguistic verbal cues accelerate matching visual targets into awareness by using a breaking continuous flash suppression paradigm. In a speeded reaction time task, observers heard spoken color labels (e.g., red) followed by colored targets that were either congruent (red), incongruent (green), or neutral (a neutral noncolor word) with respect to the labels. Importantly, and in contrast to previous studies investigating a similar question, the incidence of congruent trials was not higher than that of incongruent trials. Our results show that RTs were selectively shortened for congruent verbal–visual pairings, and that this shortening occurred over a wide range of cue–target intervals. We suggest that linguistic verbal information preactivates sensory representations, so that hearing the word ‘red’ preactivates (visual) sensory information internally.

Highlights

  • One of the most influential ideas within the domain of cognition is that of embodied cognition, in which the experienced world is the result of an interplay between an organism’s physiology, sensorimotor system, and its environment

  • The influence of communicative acts on vision appears not to be limited to the human species, as Suzuki (2018) showed that vision of Japanese tits (Parus minor) is affected by alarm calls of fellow birds: When hearing such calls, Suzuki’s birds became more perceptive to objects resembling snakes. It is disputed whether the above results show that cognition is embodied, the emerging conclusion is that linguistic labels activate neural structures involved in perceiving the information the labels refer to

  • Evidence for the latter is provided by studies showing that linguistic labels activate neural structures involved in processing sensory information

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Summary

Introduction

One of the most influential ideas within the domain of cognition is that of embodied cognition, in which the experienced world is the result of an interplay between an organism’s physiology, sensorimotor system, and its environment. The results of Experiment 1 clearly show that verbal linguistic labels speeded access to awareness of congruent target colors.

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