Inter-Sense: An Investigation of Sensory Blending in Fiction
This work addresses concept acquisition and representation for researchers and applications in fiction and language, but it is incremental as it applies existing methods to new data.
The study analyzed sensory descriptors across five senses in over 8,000 fiction books using distributional-semantic word embeddings to identify and examine their interconnections, revealing insights into perceptual spaces in language.
This study reports on the semantic organization of English sensory descriptors of the five basic senses of sight, hearing, touch, taste, and smell in a large corpus of over 8,000 fiction books. We introduce a large-scale text data-driven approach based on distributional-semantic word embeddings to identify and extract these descriptors as well as analyze their mixing interconnections in the resulting conceptual and sensory space. The findings are relevant for research on concept acquisition and representation, as well as for applications that can benefit from a better understanding of perceptual spaces of sensory experiences, in fiction, in particular, and in language in general.