The cultural cognition of taste term conflation
Languages vary in the number of descriptive terms for the four basic taste stimuli -sweet, sour, salty, and bitter, and for the glutamate stimulus. Some languages regularly present terms that link sour/bitter, salt/ sweet, and glutamate/salty. However, in other languages where these tastes are lexic...
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th-cmuir.6653943832-539192018-09-04T10:02:33Z The cultural cognition of taste term conflation Yoshimi Osawa Roy Ellen Social Sciences Languages vary in the number of descriptive terms for the four basic taste stimuli -sweet, sour, salty, and bitter, and for the glutamate stimulus. Some languages regularly present terms that link sour/bitter, salt/ sweet, and glutamate/salty. However, in other languages where these tastes are lexically encoded speakers vary between each other, and in their ability to use terms consistently. What may seem like confusion we suggest might better be described as conflation resulting from changes in the ecology and culture of food. Moreover, these patterns highlight the underlying dynamic of taste cognition, and how variation associated with taste cognition arises. Using comparative data from secondary sources, free listing tests, and experimental data from a recent study of Japanese and British English speakers, this article seeks to shed light on these issues. © BLOOMSBURY. 2018-09-04T10:02:33Z 2018-09-04T10:02:33Z 2014-01-01 Journal 17458935 17458927 2-s2.0-84896289084 10.2752/174589314X13834112761083 https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?partnerID=HzOxMe3b&scp=84896289084&origin=inward http://cmuir.cmu.ac.th/jspui/handle/6653943832/53919 |
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Social Sciences Yoshimi Osawa Roy Ellen The cultural cognition of taste term conflation |
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Languages vary in the number of descriptive terms for the four basic taste stimuli -sweet, sour, salty, and bitter, and for the glutamate stimulus. Some languages regularly present terms that link sour/bitter, salt/ sweet, and glutamate/salty. However, in other languages where these tastes are lexically encoded speakers vary between each other, and in their ability to use terms consistently. What may seem like confusion we suggest might better be described as conflation resulting from changes in the ecology and culture of food. Moreover, these patterns highlight the underlying dynamic of taste cognition, and how variation associated with taste cognition arises. Using comparative data from secondary sources, free listing tests, and experimental data from a recent study of Japanese and British English speakers, this article seeks to shed light on these issues. © BLOOMSBURY. |
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Journal |
author |
Yoshimi Osawa Roy Ellen |
author_facet |
Yoshimi Osawa Roy Ellen |
author_sort |
Yoshimi Osawa |
title |
The cultural cognition of taste term conflation |
title_short |
The cultural cognition of taste term conflation |
title_full |
The cultural cognition of taste term conflation |
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The cultural cognition of taste term conflation |
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The cultural cognition of taste term conflation |
title_sort |
cultural cognition of taste term conflation |
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2018 |
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https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?partnerID=HzOxMe3b&scp=84896289084&origin=inward http://cmuir.cmu.ac.th/jspui/handle/6653943832/53919 |
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