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Neil Cohn

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of the world, though they also appear outside of comics, such as in sand drawings used by Australian Aboriginals. Just as spoken languages differ, so do visual languages: Japanese manga are written in “Japanese Visual Language” while American comics are written in “American Visual Language.” In addition, Cohn has argued that the development of visual languages may follow similar constraints as learning spoken and signed languages, and that most people do not learn how to draw proficiently because they do not acquire visual vocabularies within a
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in that they use a vocabulary and grammar, “visual languages” differ from individual drawings because they have a vocabulary of patterned graphic representations and a grammar constraining the coherence of sequential images. Full visual languages primarily appear alongside written languages in comics
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in sentences. While narrative grammar uses a discourse level of information, its function and structure is similar to syntax in that it organizes categorical roles in hierarchic constituents in order to express meaning. Cohn’s work in cognitive neuroscience has suggested that manipulation of this
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Cohn’s work argues that common cognitive capacities underlie the processing of various expressive domains, especially verbal and signed languages and what he calls “visual language”—the structure and cognition of drawings and visual narratives, particularly those found in
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to study cross-cultural diversity in the structures of the visual languages used in comics around the world by building a multicultural corpus of annotated comics, and to examine the relationship of those structures to those in spoken languages.
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Cohn, Neil, Martin Paczynski, Ray Jackendoff, Phillip Holcomb, and Gina Kuperberg. 2012. (Pea)nuts and bolts of visual narratives: Structure and meaning in sequential image comprehension.
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Cohn, Neil, Ray Jackendoff, Phillip Holcomb, and Gina Kuperberg. 2014. The grammar of visual narratives: Neural evidence for constituent structure in visual narrative comprehension.
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Zimmer, Carl. 2012. The Charlie Brown Effect: A comic book-artist turned-neuroscientist says the images in Peanuts tap the same brain processes as sentences.
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throughout his teenage years. Beyond illustrating his academic books, Cohn’s creative work appears in several graphic novels, like
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Cohn, Neil. 2012. Explaining “I can’t draw”: Parallels between the structure and development of language and drawing.
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Cohn's primary research program with visual language theory emphasizes that a narrative structure operates as a “
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where he graduated in 2002. He then spent several years as an independent scholar before studying under linguist
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Graphical Storytelling Reaching new audiences with short comics about important health stories.
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explored the proficiency required to understand visual narratives, and was nominated for a 2021
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The Visual Language of Comics: Introduction to the Structure and Cognition of Sequential Images
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The Visual Language of Comics: Introduction to the Structure and Cognition of Sequential Images
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narrative grammar elicits similar brain responses as manipulations of syntax in language (i.e.
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Robson, David. 2013. How the visual language of comics could have its roots in the ice age.
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The Guardian profile: How the visual language of comics could have its roots in the ice age
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Cohn began working in the comic industry at age 14 by helping to run convention booths for
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where he received his PhD in psychology in 2012. He then did a postdoctoral fellowship at
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Cohen, Georgiana. Drawing Conclusions. Tufts University website. Jan. 26 - Feb. 2, 2009.
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Who Understands Comics?: Questioning the Universality of Visual Language Comprehension
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Who Understands Comics?: Questioning the Universality of Visual Language Comprehension
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Barrett, Brian. 2016. Facebook messenger finally bridges the great emoji divide
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Cohn's research has also examined the comprehension and linguistic status of
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Kambhampaty, Anna P. 2021. The Melting Face Emoji Has Already Won Us Over.
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Cohn’s work challenges many of the existing conceptions of both
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Gilmore, Garrett. 2015. Help! I can't stop thinking in emoji!
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Cohn began developing his theories as an undergraduate at
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and psychologists Gina Kuperberg and Phillip Holcomb at
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Cohn, Neil. 2015. Will emoji become a new language?
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In 2020, Cohn was awarded a Starting Grant from the
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London, UK: Bloomsbury. p. 240. 742: 300:” to sequential images analogously to 351:A User’s Guide to Thought and Meaning 324: 13: 719:Tilburg University faculty profile 14: 776: 693: 674:Tilburg University press release. 369:Early Writings on Visual Language 360: 148:Bien Klomberg, Irmak HacımusaoÄźlu 126:, Gina Kuperberg, Phillip Holcomb 163: 678: 667: 652: 637: 622: 607: 594: 579: 564: 549: 534: 520: 507: 492: 477: 185:. His research focuses on the 1: 755:American cognitive scientists 470: 227: 131:Other academic advisors 7: 733:BBC Radio 4 interview with 700:Visual Language Lab website 434:The Visual Narrative Reader 262:Leigh Cohn and Lindsey Hall 10: 781: 335:Todd McFarlane Productions 318:European Research Council 152: 144: 130: 117: 107: 89: 82: 64: 46: 28: 21: 432:Cohn, Neil, ed. (2016). 203:Who Understands Comics? 730:The Language of Comics 268:Visual language theory 68:Visual language theory 604:. London: Bloomsbury. 517:. London: Bloomsbury. 55:University of Chicago 705:Visual Linguist Blog 646:Cognitive Psychology 590:. September 29, 2021 503:. November 23, 2013 451:Cohn, Neil (2020). 413:Cohn, Neil (2013). 367:Cohn, Neil (2003). 302:syntactic structure 260:. He is the son of 600:Cohn, Neil. 2013. 588:The New York Times 545:. October 12, 2015 513:Cohn, Neil. 2020. 258:Tilburg University 112:Tilburg University 631:Cognitive Science 616:Human Development 529:BBC News website. 486:Discover Magazine 378:978-0-615-19346-5 201:. His 2020 book, 189:of understanding 156: 155: 145:Doctoral students 94:Cognitive science 84:Scientific career 70:Contributions to 772: 687: 682: 676: 671: 665: 661:Neuropsychologia 656: 650: 641: 635: 633:. 37(3): 413-452 626: 620: 618:. 55(4): 167-192 611: 605: 598: 592: 583: 577: 568: 562: 560:. 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Index

Tufts
University of Chicago
UC Berkeley
comics theory
emoji
Cognitive science
linguistics
comics studies
Tilburg University
Doctoral advisor
Ray Jackendoff
Marta Kutas
Jeff Elman
/koĘŠn/
comics theorist
cognition
comics
comics
Eisner Award for Best Academic/Scholarly Work
BBC
emoji
emoji
UC Berkeley
Ray Jackendoff
Tufts University
UC San Diego
Marta Kutas
Jeff Elman
Tilburg University
Leigh Cohn and Lindsey Hall

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