Being explicit about the implicit: inference generating techniques in visual narrative*

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    21 Citations (Scopus)

    Abstract

    Inference has long been acknowledged as a key aspect of comprehending narratives of all kinds, be they verbal discourse or visual narratives like comics and films. While both theoretical and empirical evidence points towards such inference generation in sequential images, most of these approaches remain at a fairly broad level. Few approaches have detailed the specific cues and constructions used to signal such inferences in the first place. This paper thereby outlines several specific entrenched constructions that motivate a reader to generate inference. These techniques include connections motivated by the morphology of visual affixes like speech balloons and thought bubbles, the omission of certain narrative categories, and the substitution of narrative categories for certain classes of panels. These mechanisms all invoke specific combinatorial structures (morphology, narrative) that mismatch with the elicited semantics, and can be generalized by a set of shared descriptive features. By detailing specific constructions, this paper aims to push the study of inference in visual narratives to be explicit about when and why meaning is 'filled in' by a reader, while drawing connections to inference generation in other modalities.

    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)66-97
    Number of pages32
    JournalLanguage and Cognition
    Volume11
    Issue number1
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - Mar 2019

    Keywords

    • COMPREHENSION
    • EVENT-RELATED POTENTIALS
    • GRAMMAR
    • INTEGRATION
    • MEMORY
    • METONYMY
    • REPRESENTATIONS
    • ROLES
    • TEXT
    • comics
    • film
    • inference
    • metaphor
    • narrative
    • visual language

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