The present paper grounds the linguistic categorization of space in
aspects of visual perception; specifically, the structure of
projective spatial terms such as 'above' are grounded in the process
of attention and in vector-sum coding of overall direction. This is
formalized in the attentional vector-sum (AVS) model. This
computational model accurately predicts linguistic acceptability
judgments for spatial terms, under a variety of spatial
configurations. In 7 experiments, the predictions of the AVS model are
tested against those of 3 competing models. The results support the
AVS model and disconfirm its competitors. The authors conclude that
the structure of linguistic spatial categories can be partially
explained in terms of independently motivated perceptual processes.
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