There is no author summary for this article yet. Authors can add summaries to their articles on ScienceOpen to make them more accessible to a non-specialist audience.
Abstract
The present paper evaluates the claim that abstract conceptual domains are structured
through metaphorical mappings from domains grounded directly in experience. In particular,
the paper asks whether the abstract domain of time gets its relational structure from
the more concrete domain of space. Relational similarities between space and time
are outlined along with several explanations of how these similarities may have arisen.
Three experiments designed to distinguish between these explanations are described.
The results indicate that (1) the domains of space and time do share conceptual structure,
(2) spatial relational information is just as useful for thinking about time as temporal
information, and (3) with frequent use, mappings between space and time come to be
stored in the domain of time and so thinking about time does not necessarily require
access to spatial schemas. These findings provide some of the first empirical evidence
for Metaphoric Structuring. It appears that abstract domains such as time are indeed
shaped by metaphorical mappings from more concrete and experiential domains such as
space.