Psychological Namespace
Formerly Experiential (
@experience). Renamed to Psychological (@psychological) to cover the full psychological domain — perception, sensation, emotion, cognition, and volition/desiderative attitude — rather than only experience. The rename is lexical; the membership criterion (a sentient participant in a mental/perceptual event) is unchanged and is now stated explicitly as the Senser gate (Test 1).
Core Definition
Psychological frames foreground a sentient participant — an Experiencer or a Cognizer — undergoing a mental, perceptual, somatic, or attitudinal event. The primary semantic content is the psychological event itself — perception, emotion, cognition, bodily sensation, or volitional attitude — from the participant's perspective. No physical change in the world is required; the event occurs in psychological or sensory space.
Formal template:
PSYCH(Experiencer ⊕ Cognizer, [Stimulus | Content], Mental_condition)
Key participants:
- Experiencer ⊕ Cognizer — the sentient participant. The two are mutually exclusive within a frame (FrameNet Excludes pattern): Experiencer for perception / sensation / emotion (undergoes a stimulus); Cognizer for cognition / belief / attitude (entertains a content).
- Stimulus — the external trigger or object of a perception or emotion (optional; entity or event).
- Content — the object of a cognitive or attitudinal member (optional; a proposition or event — a state of affairs — not a mere trigger).
Scope
Includes:
- Sensory perception: JoĂŁo viu Maria (JoĂŁo saw Maria), Maria ouviu o barulho (Maria heard the noise)
- Emotion: JoĂŁo ama Maria (JoĂŁo loves Maria), Maria teme o escuro (Maria fears the dark)
- Cognition: JoĂŁo sabe a resposta (JoĂŁo knows the answer), Maria entendeu (Maria understood)
- Bodily sensation: A perna de JoĂŁo dĂłi (JoĂŁo's leg hurts), JoĂŁo tem fome (JoĂŁo is hungry)
- Volition / desiderative attitude: JoĂŁo quer sair (JoĂŁo wants to leave), Maria espera vencer (Maria hopes to win)
- Senser-bearing epistemic state: João tem certeza de que venceu (João is certain he won — the Cognizer/Pensador is required)
Excludes — see other namespaces:
- Physical action by a volitional agent → Action (João correu)
- Agent causes physical change in a Patient → Causative (João quebrou o vaso)
- Non-sentient entity undergoes state change → Inchoative (O vaso quebrou)
- Property or relation holds statically of an entity → Stative (João é alto)
- Senser-less modal predication of a proposition (possibility, probability, with no sentient participant) → Attribute (É provável que chova). See the vs. Attribute boundary below — this is the sharpest new boundary.
Critical boundaries:
- Stimulus-subject psych verbs (O filme emocionou Maria) may look Causative but are Psychological — the Experiencer (Maria) is the semantic focus, not a physical result state.
- Reflexive emotional inchoatives (João se alegrou) sit at the Psychological/Inchoative boundary — classify as Psychological when the psychological domain is primary, Inchoative when the change of state is primary.
- Epistemic frames split by the Senser gate: Certeza (certainty of a thinker, Cognizer required) is Psychological; Possibilidade / Probabilidade (likelihood of a proposition, no Senser) is Attribute.
Subtypes
By psychological domain:
| Subtype | Definition | Sentient FE | Example LUs |
|---|---|---|---|
| Perception | Sensory experience via a sense modality | Experiencer | ver, ouvir, cheirar, sentir, olhar, escutar |
| Emotion | Affective state toward a stimulus or situation | Experiencer | amar, temer, alegrar-se, irritar-se, gostar |
| Cognition | Mental state: knowledge, belief, thought, memory | Cognizer | saber, acreditar, entender, lembrar, pensar |
| Bodily sensation | Physical sensation in the participant's body | Experiencer | doer, ter fome, ter frio, cansar-se |
| Volition / attitude | Desiderative or intentional attitude toward a state of affairs | Cognizer | querer, desejar, pretender, esperar |
Note on the Volition / attitude subtype. These desiderative and intentional members (querer, esperar, pretender) take a sentient participant (Cognizer) and an object that is a proposition or event — mapped to Content (a state of affairs), not to Stimulus. They pass the Senser gate and the domain test, so they belong here. This subtype is introduced as a recognized member of the namespace but is not fully developed with its own diagnostics in this revision; treat the Senser gate plus the Content-takes-a-proposition observation as sufficient guidance for now, and develop dedicated tests later if the class warrants it. Senser-less modality (possibility/probability of a proposition) is not part of this subtype — it is excluded to Attribute.
By volitional control — the key internal distinction:
| Type | Features | Test | Example |
|---|---|---|---|
| Controlled (agentive) | Participant directs attention; voluntary | Accepts imperative | olhar, escutar, pensar, observar |
| Uncontrolled (non-agentive) | Experience arises spontaneously; involuntary | Rejects imperative | ver, ouvir, amar, doer, saber |
The controlled variant is the agentive reading of the sentient participant; it does not move the frame out of the namespace (domain takes precedence over agentivity — see Aspect note). Portuguese systematically pairs controlled and uncontrolled verbs for the same sensory domain:
| Uncontrolled | Controlled | Domain |
|---|---|---|
| ver (see) | olhar (look) | Vision |
| ouvir (hear) | escutar (listen) | Audition |
| sentir (feel/smell) | cheirar / tocar (sniff / touch) | Olfaction / Touch |
By argument structure (psych verb alternation): Many psychological verbs alternate between frames depending on which participant is subject. These alternations are perspective relationships, not separate namespaces (cf. the Psychological↔Causative and Psychological↔Inchoative perspective pairs):
| Pattern | Subject | Object | Example | Semantic reading |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Experiencer-subject | Experiencer | Stimulus | JoĂŁo teme o cachorro | Ongoing experience (stative) |
| Stimulus-subject | Stimulus | Experiencer | O cachorro assusta JoĂŁo | Stimulus triggers experience (causative-like) |
| Reflexive (se + oblique) | Experiencer | — | João se assustou com o cachorro | Entry into emotional state (inchoative) |
Aspect: Psychological frames span the full aspectual range — stative (João ama Maria; João sabe), eventive/achievement (João viu Maria; João entendeu), and inchoative (João se apaixonou). Aspect does not determine namespace membership — the psychological domain does. This is the governing principle: a stative-aspect psychological frame (saber, amar) stays here, it does not migrate to Stative.
Diagnostic Tests
Test 1 — Senser gate (sentient participant required)
Does the frame require a sentient participant — an Experiencer or a Cognizer — as its primary participant? This is the membership gate.
✓ João viu Maria (João = sentient Experiencer) → PSYCHOLOGICAL
✓ João tem certeza de que venceu (João = Cognizer/Pensador) → PSYCHOLOGICAL
✗ A pedra caiu (pedra ≠sentient) → NOT PSYCHOLOGICAL (Eventive)
✗ É provável que chova (no sentient participant) → NOT PSYCHOLOGICAL (Attribute — modal-attribute of a proposition)
The last line is the decisive exclusion: a frame predicating possibility or probability of a proposition, with no Senser, is a modal Attribute, not a psychological event.
Test 2 — Mental / perceptual domain
Does the event occur in psychological or sensory space rather than the physical world?
✓ João sabe a resposta (mental state — knowledge) → PSYCHOLOGICAL
✓ Maria sentiu dor (somatic sensation) → PSYCHOLOGICAL
✗ João quebrou o vaso (physical change in world) → NOT PSYCHOLOGICAL (Causative)
Test 3 — Experiencer vs. Cognizer (which sentient FE)
Is the object of the event a trigger/stimulus (→ Experiencer + Stimulus) or a proposition/content (→ Cognizer + Content)?
✓ Maria ouviu o barulho (stimulus = barulho) → EXPERIENCER + STIMULUS (perception/emotion)
✓ João acredita que venceu (content = a proposition) → COGNIZER + CONTENT (cognition)
✓ João quer sair (content = a state of affairs) → COGNIZER + CONTENT (volition/attitude)
Experiencer and Cognizer are mutually exclusive within a frame (Excludes).
Test 4 — Control test (agentive vs. non-agentive)
Can the frame take an imperative directed at the sentient participant?
✓ Olhe! / Escute! / Pense nisso! (controlled) → agentive reading
✗ *Veja Maria! / *Ame João! / *Tenha fome! (uncontrolled) → non-agentive reading
Either way the frame remains Psychological; the test classifies the internal controlled/uncontrolled variant, not namespace membership.
Test 5 — Progressive test (stative vs. eventive within Psychological)
Does the frame resist the progressive?
Stative psychological (resists progressive):
✗ *João está sabendo a resposta → STATIVE PSYCHOLOGICAL (saber)
✗ *Maria está amando João → STATIVE PSYCHOLOGICAL (amar)
Eventive psychological (accepts progressive):
✓ João está olhando para Maria → EVENTIVE PSYCHOLOGICAL (olhar)
✓ Maria está pensando sobre o problema → EVENTIVE PSYCHOLOGICAL (pensar)
Test 6 — Psych alternation
Does the verb participate in the Experiencer-subject / Stimulus-subject alternation?
✓ João teme o cachorro ↔ O cachorro assusta João → PSYCH VERB PAIR
✓ João gosta do filme ↔ O filme agrada João → PSYCH VERB PAIR
✗ João viu Maria ↔ *Maria viu João (no role-reversal alternation) → PERCEPTION (not psych alternation)
Comparison with Adjacent Namespaces
| Feature | Psychological | Action | Causative | Inchoative | Stative | Attribute |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sentient participant required | Yes (Experiencer ⊕ Cognizer) | Yes (Agent) | No | No | No | No |
| Mental / perceptual domain | Yes | No | No | No | No | Varies |
| Physical change in world | No | No | Yes | Yes | No | No |
| Result state in Patient | No | No | Yes | Yes | No | No |
| Volitional control (typical) | Varies | Yes | Yes | No | No | No |
vs. Action: Both require a sentient subject, but Action frames profile physical observable activities (João correu). Psychological frames profile internal mental or perceptual events (João pensou, João viu). Cognitive activities (pensar, planejar) can border both — classify as Psychological when the mental content or stimulus-response relationship is primary, Action when the volitional activity itself is primary.
vs. Causative: Stimulus-subject psych verbs (O filme emocionou Maria) look causative because a stimulus acts on a participant. They remain Psychological because the semantic focus is the participant's mental state, not a physical result in a Patient. Stimulus-subject frames are the most causative-like members and are related to Causative as a perspective pair (may warrant dual tagging).
vs. Inchoative: Reflexive emotional verbs (João se alegrou, Maria se entristeceu) encode entry into an emotional state — they sit directly at the Psychological/Inchoative boundary. Default to Psychological when the psychological domain is primary; Inchoative when the change-of-state structure is primary and the emotional content is secondary.
vs. Stative: Stative-aspect psychological frames (amar, saber, temer) are aspectually static but remain Psychological because domain takes precedence over aspect. The distinguishing question: if the frame describes a property holding of an entity (height, nationality) → Stative; if it describes a mental state of a sentient participant → Psychological.
vs. Attribute (the modality boundary): This is the sharpest new boundary. Epistemic frames divide by the Senser gate:
- Senser present — a thinker's confidence in a belief (Certeza, whose
definition requires the
#Pensador/Cognizer) → Psychological (cognition). - Senser absent — possibility or probability predicated of a proposition (Possibilidade, Probabilidade; bearer is a state of affairs, no sentient participant) → Attribute (modal-attribute sub-kind).
Worked contrast: the possibility lemma family itself splits — a frame where an Agente/Cognizer considers which of several possible events will happen is Psychological (cognition), while Possibilidade/Probabilidade as a property of a hypothetical event is Attribute. One lemma family, correctly distributed by the Senser gate.
Note on modality. Modality (possibility, probability, necessity, obligation, capability) is a cross-cutting feature, not a namespace — there is no
@modal. Only Senser-bearing epistemic states (a thinker's certainty, belief, doubt) fall under Psychological. Senser-less epistemic modality → Attribute; deontic modality → Situation / Action / Stative by perspective; dynamic/capability modality → Attribute. See the reference specification (Event Structure and Namespace Meta-Frames, §6.8) for the full disposition.