AbstractAn influential position in lexical semantics holds that semantic representations for words can be derived through analysis of patterns of lexical co-occurrence in large language corpora. Firth (1957) famously summarised this principle as “you shall know a word by the company it keeps”. We explored whether the same principle could be applied to non-verbal patterns of object co-occurrence in natural scenes. We performed latent semantic analysis (LSA) on a set of photographed scenes in which all of the objects present had been manually labelled. This resulted in a representation of objects in a high-dimensional space in which similarity between two objects indicated the degree to which they appeared in similar scenes. These representat...
Features are at the core of many empirical and modeling endeavors in the study of semantic concepts....
A limiting factor in understanding memory and language is often the availability of large numbers of...
A long standing question in cognitive science has been: is visual processing completely encapsulated...
AbstractAn influential position in lexical semantics holds that semantic representations for words c...
In this paper, we propose a novel approach to introduce semantic relations into the bag-of-words fra...
You shall know an object by the company it keeps: An investigation of semantic representations deriv...
Louwerse (2011) advances the symbol interdependency hypothesis by demonstrating empirically the impo...
The automatic recognition of objects in visual scenes, both dynamic and static, is an important and ...
Texts and images provide alternative, yet orthogonal views of the same underlying cognitive concept....
We propose an interpretation of the vision process and a structural analysis of nouns and nominal re...
Abstract: Humans have a remarkable fidelity for visual long-term memory, and yet the composition of ...
Embeddings are an important tool for the representation of word meaning. Their effectiveness rests o...
Understanding and interacting with one’s environment requires parsing the image of the environment ...
Relating visual information to its linguistic semantic meaning remains an open and challenging area ...
Relating visual information to its linguistic semantic meaning remains an open and challenging area ...
Features are at the core of many empirical and modeling endeavors in the study of semantic concepts....
A limiting factor in understanding memory and language is often the availability of large numbers of...
A long standing question in cognitive science has been: is visual processing completely encapsulated...
AbstractAn influential position in lexical semantics holds that semantic representations for words c...
In this paper, we propose a novel approach to introduce semantic relations into the bag-of-words fra...
You shall know an object by the company it keeps: An investigation of semantic representations deriv...
Louwerse (2011) advances the symbol interdependency hypothesis by demonstrating empirically the impo...
The automatic recognition of objects in visual scenes, both dynamic and static, is an important and ...
Texts and images provide alternative, yet orthogonal views of the same underlying cognitive concept....
We propose an interpretation of the vision process and a structural analysis of nouns and nominal re...
Abstract: Humans have a remarkable fidelity for visual long-term memory, and yet the composition of ...
Embeddings are an important tool for the representation of word meaning. Their effectiveness rests o...
Understanding and interacting with one’s environment requires parsing the image of the environment ...
Relating visual information to its linguistic semantic meaning remains an open and challenging area ...
Relating visual information to its linguistic semantic meaning remains an open and challenging area ...
Features are at the core of many empirical and modeling endeavors in the study of semantic concepts....
A limiting factor in understanding memory and language is often the availability of large numbers of...
A long standing question in cognitive science has been: is visual processing completely encapsulated...