A D V A N C E S    I N    C O G N I T I V E     L I N G U I S T I C S

 
S E R I E S    E D I T O R S

BENJAMIN BERGEN, University of Hawaii at Manoa  (bergen AT hawaii.edu)  
VYVYAN EVANS, Bangor University (v.evans AT bangor.ac.uk)

J
ÖRG ZINKEN, University of Portsmouth   (joerg.zinken AT port.ac.uk)

Submission Guidelines
 About the series

S U M M A R Y

Cognitive Linguistics is an approach to the scientific study of language that endeavours to explain facts about language in terms of known properties and mechanisms of other dimensions of the human mind/brain. While earlier cognitive approaches to language were based on philosophical thinking about the mind, recent work places special importance on securing convergent evidence from a broad empirical basis, e.g. using samples of unrelated languages and employing methods from cognitive sciences such as (Neuro-) Psychology and Computer Science.

Advances in Cognitive Linguistics will provide a central outlet for the best new work by both established and younger scholars in this rapidly moving field. The series welcomes theoretical and empirical work on language and cognition. The series publishes work that promotes innovative approaches to Cognitive Linguistics in the form of works of reference, scholarly monographs and coherent edited collections.


 
C O N S U L T A N T    B O A R D

Jerzy Bartmiński, Marie Curie Sklodowska University, Poland
Melissa Bowerman, MPI for Psycholinguistics, Nijmegen, Netherlands
Wallace Chafe, University of California at Santa Barbara, USA
Paul Chilton, University of East Anglia, UK
Gilles Fauconnier, University of California, San Diego, USA
George Lakoff, University of California, Berkeley, USA
Ronald Langacker, University of California, San Diego, USA
Günter Radden, University of Hamburg, Germany
Chris Sinha, University of Portsmouth, UK
Kazuko Shinohara, Tokyo University of Agriculture and Technology, Japan

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