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LCM – A Short Description
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LCM – A Short Description
The Linguistic Category Model (LCM) as one form of language-based approach to the understanding of implicit causality employs several word classes that have implications for subject-object-attributions and for impressions of stability and generality of the described behavior (see Fiedler & Semin, 1988, 1992; Semin & Fiedler 1991, 1992). Further down, the different word classes are described extensively – here is a short description of the general idea: The LCM differentiates several verb classes that can be located on a concreteness-abstractness dimension. At the most concrete end, there are the Descriptive Action Verbs (DAVs) referring to specific behaviors in specific situations. There is almost no element of interpretation apparent. Examples are: to kick, to push, to phone. Next are the Interpretive Action Verbs (IAVs). These constitute the prevalent group. They abstract from concrete details, even though they still refer to specific action episodes. Examples are: to help, to insult, to obey, to fight. At the next level we find the State Verbs (SVs). They pertain to enduring states that are typically subjective and therefore not amenable to direct observation. Examples are: To hate, to abhor, to love, to admire. At the most abstract end the model adds Adjectives (ADJ), thus completing the following sequence: DAV IAV SV ADJ. As a description of a behavior approaches the abstract end of the continuum, the reader/listener tends to infer: High subject informativeness High enduringness Low verifiability High disputability Low situation informativeness (see Semin & Fiedler, 1988). A second dimension underlying the LCM is a product of the marking of affect and causality. Affect is an explicit feature of SVs. When considering the context of an episode (what does a listener think happened prior to the occasion and what will happen afterwards) there are certain patterns relating to the use of SVs and IAVs. The use of an SV tends to a stronger ascription of causality to the object of the sentence than to the subject – that is, if ”Albert despises Joe”, there must have been something about Joe that led to Albert’s contempt (see Semin & Fiedler, 1992). To demonstrate the applicability of this instrument this article contains language samples from very different sources: There are excerpts from the Nuremberg Trials (Schmid & Fiedler, 1996), from an article published in a scientific journal (Schmid & Fiedler, 1999), and there are even bits from a magazine about professional wrestling (Schmid, 1999). Additional examples are taken from the literature (mostly from children’s books). Download 167.45 Kb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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