ABSTRACTION

Abstraction. Unlocking meaning from experience, through language

Abstract

Words, language's building blocks, are labels that define different types of categories. Some words define categories of concrete entities (cats, tables) while others define abstract entities (legacy, empathy). Some words define generic categories that encompass many different entities (vehicles, art) while others define more specific ones (sport cars, Impressionism). To unlock meaning from experience, we construct different types of categories through mechanisms of abstraction. Concreteness and specificity are the two variables that support abstractions. However, when investigating the mechanisms and effects of abstraction, scholars from different fields typically focus only on specificity or only on concreteness. Relying on different and partial definitions of abstraction, the debate across scientific communities is impaired and the theoretical development is jeopardized. This is also due to the fact that human-generated resources to measure specificity do not exist. The ABSTRACTION team will collect specificity data for thousands of words in 2 languages (English and Italian) through an innovative gamification technique. Using this data and other lexical resources, we will run extensive statistical analyses aimed at explaining how specificity interacts with concreteness in: - Thought, to explain contrasting findings that have been previously attributed to concreteness alone - Language, to construct texts that are optimally clear and informative for the target readerships - Creativity, to construct effective metaphors in different contexts ABSTRACTION will explain how word specificity and concreteness enable us to unlock meaning from experience and achieve the higher-order generalizations on which much of our thinking and talking relies. This is a hot topic in cognitive science, where the grounding of abstract concepts is an open question, and in AI research, where it is still unknown how machines may construct and use concepts in the way humans do.

Project details

Unibo Team Leader: Marianna Marcella Bolognesi

Unibo involved Department/s:
Dipartimento di Lingue, Letterature e Culture Moderne

Coordinator:
ALMA MATER STUDIORUM - Università di Bologna(Italy)

Total Eu Contribution: Euro (EUR) 1.392.265,00
Project Duration in months: 60
Start Date: 01/06/2022
End Date: 31/05/2027

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This project has received funding from the European Union’s Horizon Europe research and innovation programme under grant agreement No 101039777 This project has received funding from the European Union’s Horizon Europe research and innovation programme under grant agreement No 101039777