info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Processes and verbs of doing, in the brain: Theoretical implications for Systemic Functional Linguistics
Fecha
2016-11Registro en:
García, Adolfo Martín; Ibáñez Barassi, Agustín Mariano; Processes and verbs of doing, in the brain: Theoretical implications for Systemic Functional Linguistics; John Benjamins Publishing Company; Functions of Language; 23; 3; 11-2016; 305-335
0929-998X
1569-9765
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
García, Adolfo Martín
Ibáñez Barassi, Agustín Mariano
Resumen
Systemic functional linguistics (SFL) has long been characterized by its permeability to interdisciplinary contributions. However, it has remained virtually uninformed by neuroscience. Such a disconnection has become all the more unfortunate since SFL ventured into the cognitive domain (Halliday & Matthiessen 1999). Opening a new avenue of disciplinary interaction for SFL, this paper reviews experimental studies on the neurocognitive basis of processes and verbs of doing, highlighting their theoretical implications for cognitive modeling within SFL. Available data corroborates the SFL assumptions that these processes and verbs are (i) conceptually different from participants and nouns, (ii) functionally distinguishable from other process and verb types, and (iii) non-arbitrarily related to each other. Moreover, the evidence shows that (at least some of) the conceptual distinctions within semantics are naturally grounded in more basic (motor and perceptual) neurocognitive distinctions. This, we propose, calls for an elaboration of the stratified SFL model via the inclusion of a sensorimotor stratum. More generally, the article seeks to foster an empirically sound and theoretically relevant dialogue between SFL and promising approaches within cognitive neuroscience.