The mental lexicon LG 103 Introduction to psycholinguistics Celia (Vasiliki) Antoniou.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
KeTra.
Advertisements

Inquisit Internet Study:
Accessing spoken words: the importance of word onsets
Psycholinguistic what is psycholinguistic? 1-pyscholinguistic is the study of the cognitive process of language acquisition and use. 2-The scope of psycholinguistic.
INTRALINGUAL HOMOGRAPHS: words with two distinct meanings in one of the bilingual's languages  Fr. voler means both ‘to steal’ and ‘to fly’ (i.e., it.
SEMANTICS.
Language and Cognition Colombo, June 2011 Day 8 Aphasia: disorders of comprehension.
Is there evidence for the processing of different memory systems by different areas of the brain? Jeff Karpicke, Jessica Roland, Johnie Sanders. Department.
Does radical type frequency reliably affect character recognition? Zih-Nian, Cong & Jei-Tun, Wu Department of Psychology, National Taiwan University, Taipei,
9/22/10Psyc / Ling / Comm 525 Fall 10 Semantic Priming (Phenomenon & Tool)...armkitchentree Related prime >doctoractor < Unrelated prime nurse floor...
Chapter 7 Knowledge Terms: concept, categorization, prototype, typicality effect, object concepts, rule-governed, exemplars, hierarchical organization,
Auditory Word Recognition
Denotation and connotation denotation and connotation are used to different types of value that we attribute to words.
Making a Clay Mask 6 Step 1 Step 2 Step 3Decision Point Step 5 Step 4 Reading ComponentsTypical Types of Tasks and Test Formats Phonological/Phonemic.
PS: Introduction to Psycholinguistics Winter Term 2005/06 Instructor: Daniel Wiechmann Office hours: Mon 2-3 pm Phone:
Psycholinguistic methodology Psycholinguistics: Questions and methods.
Read: Loftus for Tuesday Vokey for April 14 Idea Journals due on the 16th.
Opportunities for extra credit: Keep checking at:
PSY 369: Psycholinguistics Representing language.
1 Pattern Recognition (cont.). 2 Auditory pattern recognition Stimuli for audition is alternating patterns of high and low air pressure called sound waves.
Mental Lexicon Body of knowledge we hold in our minds about words Includes pronunciation, spelling, meaning syntactic roles Recognition of words—whether.
False Memories (Beth Loftus) Lost Mariner (Oliver Sacks)
Language, Mind, and Brain by Ewa Dabrowska Chapter 2: Language processing: speed and flexibility.
PSY 369: Psycholinguistics
PSY 369: Psycholinguistics Some basic linguistic theory part3.
A Modular Approach to STM Allan Baddeley: Articulatory Loop Central Executive Visuospatial Sketchpad The article by Lee Brooks considers a double-dissociation.
Knowledge information that is gained and retained what someone has acquired and learned organized in some way into our memory.
Psycholinguistics 05 Internal Lexicon.
PSY 369: Psycholinguistics Lexical selection Lexical access How do we retrieve the linguistic information from Long-term memory? What factors are involved.
Intro to Psycholinguistics What its experiments are teaching us about language processing and production.
Human Memory What we usually think of as “memory” in day-to-day usage is actually long-term memory, but there are also important short-term and sensory.
OB : Building Effective Interviewing Skills Building Effective Interviewing Skills Structure Objectives Basic Design Content Areas Questions Interview.
WORD SEMANTICS 4 DAY 29 – NOV 4, 2011 Brain & Language LING NSCI Harry Howard Tulane University.
Introduction Pinker and colleagues (Pinker & Ullman, 2002) have argued that morphologically irregular verbs must be stored as full forms in the mental.
Introduction How do people recognize objects presented in pictorial form? The ERP technique has been shown to be extremely useful in studies where the.
+ Treatment of Aphasia Week 12 April 1 st, Review Involvement of semantic and phonological stages in naming. Differentiating features of naming.
What is a reflection? serious thought or consideration the fixing of the mind on some subject;
SOCIO-COGNITIVE APPROACHES TO TESTING AND ASSESSMENT
PSY 369: Psycholinguistics A Crash Course in Linguistic Theory Part II.
The New Normal: Goodness Judgments of Non-Invariant Speech Julia Drouin, Speech, Language and Hearing Sciences & Psychology, Dr.
It is the study of the meaning of words, phrases, and sentences in a language system. What is semantics?
1 Lesson Four. 2 The Spelling Checker Searching for Text Menu shortcuts Printing a File Erasing a File.
Model of Memory RETRIEVAL Turning now to Long-Term Memory ATTENTION
Lexicography Lexicon has two different meanings:
3.04 Interpret marketing information to test hypotheses and/ or solve issues Marketing Management.
Tip of the tongue state sematics. What do these words mean? ● Fecundity.
Associative Theories of Long- Term Memory. Network Theory The basic notion that we need to explore is that memory consists of a large number of associations.
Tonal Violations Interact with Lexical Processing: Evidence from Cross-modal Priming Meagan E. Curtis 1 and Jamshed J. Bharucha 2 1 Dept. of Psych. & Brain.
Remembering Can Cause Inhibition Retrieval-Induced Inhibition As Cue Independent Process Veling & Knippenberg, 2004.
Chapter 11 Language. Some Questions to Consider How do we understand individual words, and how are words combined to create sentences? How can we understand.
Sentence Production Lecture 4. The Production Process the syntactic based grammars of Chomsky are psychologically invalid since their rules are formulated.
Models of Production and Comprehension [1] Ling4-437.
Lab 4: Pseudo-homophones They sound like words, but they aren’t.
VISUAL WORD RECOGNITION. What is Word Recognition? Features, letters & word interactions Interactive Activation Model Lexical and Sublexical Approach.
Chapter 9 Knowledge. Some Questions to Consider Why is it difficult to decide if a particular object belongs to a particular category, such as “chair,”
Semantic Priming Effects in a Bilingual Gujarati Speaker
Memory and logic in language learning
Cognitive Processes in SLL and Bilinguals:
Copyright © American Speech-Language-Hearing Association
Phonological Priming and Lexical Access in Spoken Word Recognition
Sentence Production.
Influence of native-language phonology
Verb Activation through Priming at the Syntax-Semantics Interface
Learning Ms. Carmelitano.
Influence of native-language phonology
Reading targets This breakdowns the reading coverage into manageable targets to ensure children meet the month age band.
عمادة التعلم الإلكتروني والتعليم عن بعد
عمادة التعلم الإلكتروني والتعليم عن بعد
Phonological Priming and Lexical Access in Spoken Word Recognition
Memory and logic in language learning
Presentation transcript:

The mental lexicon LG 103 Introduction to psycholinguistics Celia (Vasiliki) Antoniou

What is the mental lexicon? The mental lexicon is defined as a mental dictionary that contains information regarding a word's meaning, pronunciation, syntactic characteristics, and so on

Size There’s no simple answer to this... Do we store every single word or just lemmas? (i.e. drink only, or drink, drinking, drunk, drank, etc...)?

Organisation The mental lexicon differs from the lexicon in that it is not just a general collection of words.lexicon It deals with how those words are activated, stored, processed, and retrieved by each speaker. What do the previous terms refer to?? An individual’s mental lexicon changes and grows as new words are learned and is always developing. However, there are several theorists that argue exactly how this occurs.

Organisation The mental lexicon is not organized alphabetically like a dictionary. The active nature of the mental lexicon makes any dictionary comparison unhelpful. It seems to be organized in a more complex manner, with links between phonologically and semantically related lexical items. How do we know? A speech error, commonly referred to as a slip of the tongue [1] (Latin: lapsus linguae), is a deviation (conscious or unconscious) from the apparently intended form of an utterance. [1]Latin utterance Anecdote for antidote

LEXICAL DECISION TASK If you took part in a lexical decision task, what would you be asked to do? Participants in this task are required to respond as quickly and accurately as possible to a string of letters presented on a screen to say if the string is a non-word or a real word. They have been used for many years to show how the words are linked in our minds + how the mental lexicon is structured. It is also called.... Priming

So what? Response time to these words is faster/slower if that word was heard/seen recently??? Reaction times from this task indicate that certain words are more "active" in participants minds after related words have been presented. i.e. present the word "bread" to the participant and then see an increased reaction time later to the word "butter". The word "bread" had activated all related words, including "butter“ so the recognition process was faster. This increased reaction time demonstrates that related words are stored closely in the mental lexicon.

Priming PrimeTargetResponse time nurseNurseFast lexical decision HospitalnurseRelatively quick lexical decision lionNurseSlow lexical decision walkedwalk1 entry thoughtthinkNo priming, they are 2 entries!

Back to handouts!

Cross – modal priming What is it? Prime is presented auditorily, target presented visually on screen Used to show that by hearing only the first part of a word, all possible continuations are activated! E.g. on hearing “carp...” both carpet and carpenter are activated!

Why and how to use it? During this task, study participants heard recorded sentences containing lexical or syntactic ambiguities while seated in front of a computer screen. When the ambiguous word or phrase was uttered in the recording, a simultaneous string of letters, either a word or a non-word, is flashed on the computer screen. These words usually reflected one or another meaning of an ambiguous word or phrase in the recorded sentence. Study participants were then asked to respond as quickly as possible once the probes were processed. The idea is that multiple meanings are activated at the moment an ambiguity is encountered in a sentence, which primes related concepts. Swinney’s theory (1979) follows that once these related concepts are primed, recognition of them in this task will be quicker than words that are not activated.

So, what kind of priming to we have in 2? Any questions??