In the linguistic domain, conceptual metaphors have been
shown to structure grammar, the lexicon, and abstract
reasoning. Much recent research on conceptual metaphor
comes from corpus examination, which is increasingly
focused on developing quantificational tools to reveal cooccurrence
patterns indicative of source and target domain
associations. Some mappings between source and target are
transparent. However, other metaphors, especially those that
structure abstract processes, are more complex because the
target domain is lexically divorced from the source. This
study introduces new techniques directed at the quantitative
evaluation of metaphorical salience when target and source
relationships are nonobvious. Constellations of sourcedomain
triggers are identified in the data and shown to
disproportionately emerge in topic specific discourse. This
measurement can be taken as one indicator of conceptual
salience among the target speech community.