Semiotics 23-44

A highly detailed and artistic representation of semiotic theories with symbols, signs, and iconic imagery reflecting communication and interpretation, vibrant colors

Explore the World of Semiotics

Test your knowledge of semiotics with this engaging quiz designed to challenge your understanding of key concepts and thinkers in the field. Whether you're a student, teacher, or simply passionate about communication theory, this quiz offers a fun way to reinforce your learning.

  • 20 thought-provoking questions
  • Covers various aspects of semiotics
  • Perfect for enthusiasts and scholars alike
20 Questions5 MinutesCreated by DecodingSign423
What does Saussure mean when he says that linguistic sign is arbitrary ?
That there is no natural reason why within a specific language any given signifier should be associated to any given signified
That there is no historical reason why within a specific language any given signifier should be associated to any given signified
That there is no particular reason why a speaker of any specific language should associate any given signifier to any given signified
Which communication model explicity refer to the notion of Code ?
Jakobson’s and Quine’s model
Umberto Eco’s (Eco-Fabbri et all) and Jakobson’s models
Shannon-weaver’s and Jakobson’s model
Which of the following definitions does not apply to phonemes ?
The minimum elements of linguistic content
The minimum element of linguistic expression
Types of sounds that are able to differentiate linguistic meanings
To throw off a group of pursuers as to his direction of escape, Zorro shoes his horse the wrong way round, the hoof-prints on the ground are :
An in-between example of motivated yet arbitrary signs
Artificial signs that the pursuers are meant to interpret as natural signs
Natural signs that the pursuers are meant to interpret as artificial signs
Put the following terms used by Eco in their correct order, starting from the external , real world entity and moving inwards, towards the communicative rules that are inscribed within the text
Empirical author, narrator, model author
Model author, empirical author, narrator
Empirical author , model author , narrator
Which of these statements best defines Barthes’s notion of myth ?
A myth is an exclusively visual sign that may be used in advertising in order to manipulate the perception of historical facts
A myth is a narrative that was told by prehistoric hunter-gatherers during ancient initiation rites
A myth is a naturalized form of signification that conceals the historical and arbitrary connection of its connotational meaning with the form that function as its signifier
According to Emile Benueniste , the pronouns I and You
Have no meaning outside a specific speech situation
Have no reference outside a specific speech situation
Have no sense outside a specific speech situation
What does the Kuleshav effect prove ?
That a narrative that limited itself to reitareting consolidated expectations would scarcely narrative, since the streght of a story lies in its ability to represent the transgression of a social standard
That when most people watch an animation od independetely moving geometric shapes, they attribute intentional movement and goal-directed interactions to the shapes
That viewers derive more meaning from the interaction of two sequential shots than from a single shot of isolation
What is the Cognitive Type in Eco’s theory of iconicity ?
A perceptual model that allows to recognize two similar objects
A representment that looks like its object
A type of interference that triggered by natural signs
What is the linguistic function that humans acquire first , according to Jakobson ?
Referential
Emotive
Phatic
Suppose a doctor diagnose a patient with chicken-pox on account of the red spots that cover the patient’s face . in Peircean terms the red spots are
Representamen
Immediate object
Dynamic object
What according to Peirce is the inferential sequence that provides the contrast framework of any scientific inquiry ?
Abduction – induction – deduction
Deduction – abduction – induction
Abduction – deduction – induction
According to Peirce
Some mental activity is inferential
all mental activity is inferential
Most mental activity is inferential
Which of the following signs is not an Index according to Peirce ?
Painting
Footprint
photograph
Why is the post hoc ergo propter hoc principle considered as a logic of fallacy ?
Because most of what we know about the world is not made up of first hand experience , since it relies on texts that have been told to us by others
Because abduction are always fallible
Because there is no priori guarantee that what happens next is cause by what happens before
What are hypo-coded abduction
Hypothesis in which the rule does not yet exist, and it is up to the interpreter to formulate it from scratch
Hypothesis in which the connection between the case and the rule is already registered in the encycolpedia
Hypothesis in which the rule is selected from a series of equally probable rule made available by the encyclopedia
Dumbledore sends harry and hermione back in time to save Buckbeak and Sirius Black” . If the narrative program is “saving Buckbeak and Sirius black “ what is Hermione’s actantial role ?
Helper
Subject
Sender
What makes a fact surprising according to Peirce ?
Its unexpected irregularity
Its unexpected regularity
It expected regularity
Why is a signature an index according to Peirce ?
Because it is a proof of its object
Because it stands for its object
Because it is similar to its object
Which of the following is the best way to define the difference between Opponent and Anti-subjects according to Greimas ?
Opponents may be found in instrumental narrative programs whereas Anti-subjects are active in base-narratives programs
Opponents are involved in the decisive test while ani-subjects are active in the glorifying test
Opponents intervene at the time of the acquisition of competence whereas anti-subjects intervene in the sanction phase
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