Gradient Salience Model Explained

The Gradient Salience model is a model of figurative language comprehension proposed by Rachel Giora in 2002 as an alternative to the standard pragmatic model.

It offers a possible explanation for the results obtained in various contemporary studies, in which figurative language is processed as fast as literal language.

Salient and non salient meanings

The definition of saliency is included in Rachel Giora's (2002) article "Literal vs. figurative language: Different or equal?".[1] Salient meanings are meanings which are stored in the mental lexicon. They are most prominent in language, as they are the most familiar, conventional, frequent and prototypical.Non salient meanings, on the other hand, are meanings which are relatively new to language. They are novel and infrequent.[2]

Assumptions

The Gradient Salience model assumes that the processing of metaphorical expressions depends on the meaning's saliency.

See also

Notes and References

  1. 10.1016/S0378-2166(01)00045-5 . Literal vs. Figurative language: Different or equal? . 2002 . Giora . Rachel . Journal of Pragmatics . 34 . 4 . 487–506.
  2. 10.1016/j.brainres.2009.05.088 . Comprehending conventional and novel metaphors: An ERP study . 2009 . Lai . Vicky Tzuyin . Curran . Tim . Menn . Lise . Brain Research . 1284 . 145–55 . 19505446. 11858/00-001M-0000-0012-BE10-E . 15644733 . free .