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Posner AA vs Aa RT Data PDF

32 Pages·2005·20.37 MB·English
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Posner AA vs Aa RT Data 1 Posner: Reaction Times to Different Pairs 2 Language The Mental Lexicon How is information about words stored in the brain? – “Mental Lexicon”, semantic information, syntactic information, word forms. One or several? Production vs. comprehension Input - output Orthographic - phonological 3 Language Words How many are there? Problems for counting: inflected forms, separate senses, dialect, scientific nomenclature, slang, addition of word-forming elements, etc. 4 Language Words Words: Cambridge Encyclopedia of the English Language: > 1,000,000. Oxford Companion to the English Language: > 1,000,000. Vocabulary: Shakespeare’s plays: 29,066 distinct forms, incl. proper names., est. 18,000-25,000. 18-month old: ~50 – two years: ~300, 3-year old: ~1,000 (adding 3/day) 16-year old: 10,000-12,000. College grad.: 20,000-25,000. 5 Language The Mental Lexicon Semantic network: representation of word meanings. Semantic priming studies: prime-target: “chair-table” unrelated: “chair-nurse” pseudoword pairs: “chair-flark” 6 Language Lexical Semantic Networks Nodes: concepts, words Links: connection strengths reflect the amount of conceptual or semantic relatedness between nodes. Stimulus presentation activates one (or several) nodes, activation spreads along links Problems: How are links determined? What are neural equivalents of nodes and links (single neurons or cell assemblies)? 7 Language Lexical Semantic Networks Distributed processing models: Feature-based representation, input is a stimulus vector and network “settles” towards a target semantic vector. 8 PET data: Hierarchical Experiment 9 Language Neural Basis of the Mental Lexicon Evidence from brain lesions (dissociations between naming of non-living and living things, selective deficits in semantic memory after stroke etc.) Study by Damasio et al., 1996: Propose that lexical knowledge is organized among three separate neural systems: 1. Conceptual content (meaning, semantic features) 2. Phonological elements (sounds) 3. Modality-independent lexical knowledge (left temporal lobe) 10

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1. Posner AA vs Aa RT Data How is information about words stored in the brain? nomenclature, slang, addition of word-forming elements, etc.
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