That means something to me: the effect of linguistic and emotional experience on the acquisition and processing of novel abstract concepts
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Abstract
We used a novel linguistic training paradigm to investigate the experience-dependent acquisition, representation and processing of novel emotional and neutral abstract concepts. Participants engaged in mental imagery (n = 32) or lexico-semantic rephrasing (n = 34) of linguistic material during five training sessions and successfully learned the novel abstract concepts. Feature production after training showed that specifically emotion features enriched the emotional concepts’ representations. Unexpectedly, for participants engaging in a vivid mental imagery during training a higher semantic richness of the acquired emotional concepts slowed down lexical decisions. Rephrasing, in turn, promoted a better learning and processing performance than imagery, probably due to stronger established lexical associations. Our results confirm the importance of emotional and linguistic experience and additional deep lexico-semantic processing for the acquisition, representation and processing of abstract concepts.
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- last seen: 2026-05-19T01:45:01.086888+00:00