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Reilly, Jamie; Kean, Jacob – Cognitive Science, 2007
Words associated with perceptually salient, highly imageable concepts are learned earlier in life, more accurately recalled, and more rapidly named than abstract words (R. W. Brown, 1976; Walker & Hulme, 1999). Theories accounting for this concreteness effect have focused exclusively on semantic properties of word referents. A novel possibility is…
Descriptors: Semantics, Etymology, Word Processing, Nouns
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Harm, Michael W.; Seidenberg, Mark S. – Psychological Review, 2004
Are words read visually (by means of a direct mapping from orthography to semantics) or phonologically (by mapping from orthography to phonology to semantics)? The authors addressed this long-standing debate by examining how a large-scale computational model based on connectionist principles would solve the problem and comparing the model's…
Descriptors: Phonology, Semantics, Models, Reading Processes
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Cree, George S.; McNorgan, Chris; McRae, Ken – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2006
The authors present data from 2 feature verification experiments designed to determine whether distinctive features have a privileged status in the computation of word meaning. They use an attractor-based connectionist model of semantic memory to derive predictions for the experiments. Contrary to central predictions of the conceptual structure…
Descriptors: Computation, Semantics, Linguistic Theory, Experimental Psychology