“…This cognitive impact of language-specific preferences on non-verbal conceptualisation is at the centre of the study reported on here. As such, we situate ourselves in the recent body of studies inspired by event integration theory, which have shown how languagespecific preferences in event descriptions do indeed impact attention allocation during event observation, memorisation, and categorisation (see, among others, Berman & Slobin, 1994;Bosse & Papafragou, 2010Bowerman & Choi, 2001Choi & Bowerman, 1991;Filipović, 2011;Flecken et al, 2015;Flecken & Van Bergen, 2019;Gennari et al, 2002;Hickmann, 2006;Landau & Jackendoff, 1993;Papafragou & Selimis, 2010;Slobin, 1996; for an account of bilinguals and learners, see, among others, Filipović, 2011Filipović, , 2018. Focusing on the conceptualisation of locative events, Flecken and Van Bergen (2019) investigate the cognitive impact of the probabilistic differences in the linguistic encoding of relational information in English and Dutch via a picture-matching task.…”