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《认知语言学》2010年第3期Journal Title: Cognitive LinguisticsVolume Number: 21Issue Number: 3Issue Date: September 2010Main Text:Cognitive LinguisticsVolume: 21, Number: 3 (September 2010)________________________________________The above issue is now available online from De Gruyter Mouton at: /toc/cogl/2010/21/3?ai=ru&ui=w6&af=HThe English past tense: Analogy reduxSteve ChandlerWho thinks that a piece of furniture refers to a broken couch? Count-mass constructions and individuation in English and SpanishMaria D. Sera and Whitney GoodrichFields and settings: French il and ?a impersonals in copular complement constructionsMichel AchardDifferences in continuity of force dynamics and emotional valence in sentenceswith causal and adversative connectivesYurena Morera, Manuel De Vega, and Juan CamachoFrom premodal to modal meaning: Adjectival pathways in EnglishAn Van LindenThe relation between iconicity and subjectification in Portuguese complementation: Complements of perception and causation verbsRainer Vesterinen《构式与框架》2010年第2卷第1期Journal Title: Constructions and FramesVolume Number: 2Issue Number: 1Issue Date: 2010Main Text:Constructions and Frames 2:12010. iv, 123 pp.Table of contentsArticlesA frame-semantic approach to logical metonymyJosefien Sweep 1-32Count-mass coercion, and the perspective of time and variationDebra Ziegeler 33-73Aspectual meanings in two cognitive domains: A constructional approach to aspectin SerbianLuna Filipovi? 74-89Variably future-marked conditionals in Greek: Integrating discourse and grammarKiki Nikiforidou and Rena Torres Cacoullos 90-123《认知科学学报》征稿Full Title: Journal of Cognitive ScienceLinguistic Field(s): Cognitive Science; EnglishCall Deadline: 31-Dec-2010Call for PapersAims & ScopeThe Journal of Cognitive Science (JCS) is published biannually as the official journal of International Association for Cognitive Science (IACS)by the Institute for Cognitive Science at Seoul National University, located in Seoul, Korea. It aims to publish research articles of the highest quality and significance within the disciplines that form cognitivescience, including philosophy, psychology, linguistics, artificial intelligence, neuroscience, anthropology, and education. Submissions thatcross traditional disciplinary boundaries in either themes or methods are especially encouraged.Contributions may be in the form of articles, brief reports, reviews, or squibs. The JCS showcases quality research, encourages the exchange of ideas, and illustrates the interdisciplinary work that is the hallmark ofcognitive science. Authors who have published in JCS include Paul Smolensky, Alfonso Caramazza, Dedre Gentner, Paul Thagard, andJean-PierreDescles.JCS vol. 10 (2009) includes the special issues of 'Color in Thought and Language' and 'Quantification in East Asian Languages,' and JCS vol. 11, Issue 1 (2010) is the special issue of 'Reading Development and Reading Disorders in Asian Languages.'Editor-in-Chief: Chungmin Lee, Seoul National UniversityEditors:Gualtiero Piccinini, University of Missouri - St. LouisNaomi Miyake, University of TokyoKoiti Hasida, National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology, JapanKyoung-Min Lee, Seoul National UniversityThe Editorial Board and Advisory Editorial Board are listed on/editors/editors.php.Submission Guidelines:All submissions must be in English, written clearly and in sufficient detail so that referees can assess the merits of the work. Papers should beno longer than 10,000 words and should conform to General Science style orModified APA style.1.General Science StyleReferencesJackendoff, R. S. 1976, 'Toward an Explanatory Semantic Representation', LinguisticInquiry 7, 89-150.Sadock, J. M. 1978, 'On Testing for Conversational Implicature', in P. Cole(ed.),Syntax and Semantics 9: Pragmatics.2.Modified APA StyleEven if we adopt some form of APA, we need to modify it in such a way that session titles in the paper text are numbered (e.g., 1. Introduction 2. Experiment 1 3. Experiment 2 4. General Discussion). People in other areas than psychology adopt numbering system. Its REFERENCES examples are as follows:ReferencesLeakey, R., & Lewin, R. (1992). Origins reconsidered: In search of what makes ushuman. New York: Doubleday.O'Sullivan, C., & Yeager, C. P. (1989). Communicative context and linguistic competence:The effect of social setting on a chimpanzee's conversational skill. InR. A. Gardner,B. T. Gardner, & T. E. Van Cantfort (Eds.), Teaching sign language tochimpanzees(pp. 269-279). Albany: SUNY Press.Papers should have abstracts and several key words. Papers will be receivedand processed as promptly as possible.Authors should send an electronic copy (e.g., a MS Word or PDF file) of their submission to j-cs@ or clee@snu.ac.kr.Each submission will be sent to three international reviewers. The reviews will be forwarded to the authors, who will then have an opportunity to makerevisions if warranted.Bibliographic InformationCommenced publication in 2000~2010ISSN: 1598-2327Subscription: per volume (print) $20 (individual); $50 (institution, e-also). (e-) $10.Questions? Please direct any questions, comments or concerns toj-cs@. For more information visit 《人类认知处理:语言结构与使用的认知基础》系列丛书新编委New Editors for Human Cognitive ProcessingJohn Benjamins Publishing is pleased to announce that there will be a new editorial team at the book series Human Cognitive Processing: Cognitive Foundations of Language Structure and Use. The co-editors are now Klaus-UwePanther, University of Hamburg and Linda L. Thornburg.The book series Human Cognitive Processing is a forum for interdisciplinaryresearch on the grammatical structure, semantic organization, and communicative function of language(s), and their anchoring in human cognitive faculties.Accordingly, the series will publish works addressing the nature of cognitive systems and processes involved in speaking and understanding natural language(s)including their connections to general knowledge, behavior, and perception and the relation between language and thought.The series is open to any type of theoretical and methodological approach to the above questions and to research from any discipline concerned with them, including but not restricted to cognitively oriented branches of linguistics, semiotics, psychology, anthropology, philosophy,artificialintelligence and computer science, and neuroscience. Publications in the series may be monographs, collective volumes, or reference works, in the English language.The editors invite submissions of book proposals, preferably structured according to Benjamins' Guidelines for Book Proposals./cgi-bin/show_html.cgi?file=/jbp/submit.htmProposals may be sent to :Klaus-Uwe Panther, panther [at] uni-hamburg.deorLinda L. Thornburg, lthornburg [at] 。

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