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COGSCI
1998

Conceptual Integration Networks

13 years 4 months ago
Conceptual Integration Networks
Conceptual integration—"blending"—is a general cognitive operation on a par with analogy, recursion, mental modeling, conceptual categorization, and framing. It serves a variety of cognitive purposes. It is dynamic, supple, and active in the moment of thinking. It yields products that frequently become entrenched in conceptual structure and grammar, and it often performs new work on its previously entrenched products as inputs. Blending is easy to detect in spectacular cases but it is for the most part a routine, workaday process that escapes detection except on technical analysis. It is not reserved for special purposes, and is not costly. In blending, structure from input mental spaces is projected to a separate, "blended" mental space. The projection is selective. Through completion and elaboration, the blend develops structure not provided by the inputs. Inferences, arguments, and ideas developed in the blend can have effect in cognition, leading us to modi...
Gilles Fauconnier, Mark Turner
Added 21 Dec 2010
Updated 21 Dec 2010
Type Journal
Year 1998
Where COGSCI
Authors Gilles Fauconnier, Mark Turner
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