“…Here are some questions that researchers might want to consider addressing in future studies: - What if words that sound or look similar carried such formal overlap over to the conceptual domain, linking together the concepts they convey, a kind of hyper‐Whorfian effect?
- What if the particular words that an individual chooses to describe more or less complex objects and situations made that individual more or less able to perceive them, recognize them, categorize them, and manipulate them?
- What if, on the contrary, the lack of a particular word or grammatical feature in the native language meant that a speaker of that language could not readily conceptualize a particular abstract object or situation in the same way as speakers of another language that has the word or feature in question (see, for instance, Li et al., 2018, 2023, for the case of grammatical tense and Chinese)?
- What if verbal and nonverbal conceptual representations implemented by neural networks in the human brain interacted with the networks in charge of early stages of perception to a much greater extent than scholars have been able to understand?
- What if language did more than superficially orient attention to features of the world and also contributed to unconsciously shaping human behavior?
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