A central question in cognitive science is how semantic information is mentally represented. Two dominant theories of semantic representation are language-based distributional semantic models (which suggest that word meaning is based on which words co-occur in language) and semantic networks based on word associations (which suggest that words are represented as a network in which words with closer meanings are more closely linked). We investigate the issue of semantic representation through the lens of core vocabulary -- the set of words that are most central in the mental lexicon -- which these two theories make different predictions about. We report on the results of an experiment that tests which measure of core vocabulary most closely ...
Comunicació presentada a: The 2012 Joint Conference on Empirical Methods in Natural Language Process...
In much of neuroimaging and neuropsychology, regions of the brain have been associated with ‘lexical...
When a user cannot find a word, he may think of semantically related words that could be used into a...
A central question in cognitive science is how semantic information is mentally represented. Two dom...
In this article, we describe the most extensive set of word associations collected to date. The data...
In this article, we describe the most extensive set of word associations collected to date. The data...
Most distributional lexico-semantic models derive their representations based on external language r...
This thesis aimed to shed light on the process of word learning and the consequences of storing, ret...
We present an account of semantic representation that focuses on distinct types of information from ...
Nonarbitrary phenomena in language, such as systematic association in the form-meaning interface, ha...
Recognition of objects, their representation and retrieval in memory and the link of this representa...
Motivated by the widespread use of distributional models of semantics within the cognitive science c...
A consolidated approach to the study of the mental representation of word meanings has consisted in ...
How does cognition organize sparse and ambiguous input from the environment into useful representati...
The present study outlines a proposal to relate linguistic modelling of word meaning to a general mo...
Comunicació presentada a: The 2012 Joint Conference on Empirical Methods in Natural Language Process...
In much of neuroimaging and neuropsychology, regions of the brain have been associated with ‘lexical...
When a user cannot find a word, he may think of semantically related words that could be used into a...
A central question in cognitive science is how semantic information is mentally represented. Two dom...
In this article, we describe the most extensive set of word associations collected to date. The data...
In this article, we describe the most extensive set of word associations collected to date. The data...
Most distributional lexico-semantic models derive their representations based on external language r...
This thesis aimed to shed light on the process of word learning and the consequences of storing, ret...
We present an account of semantic representation that focuses on distinct types of information from ...
Nonarbitrary phenomena in language, such as systematic association in the form-meaning interface, ha...
Recognition of objects, their representation and retrieval in memory and the link of this representa...
Motivated by the widespread use of distributional models of semantics within the cognitive science c...
A consolidated approach to the study of the mental representation of word meanings has consisted in ...
How does cognition organize sparse and ambiguous input from the environment into useful representati...
The present study outlines a proposal to relate linguistic modelling of word meaning to a general mo...
Comunicació presentada a: The 2012 Joint Conference on Empirical Methods in Natural Language Process...
In much of neuroimaging and neuropsychology, regions of the brain have been associated with ‘lexical...
When a user cannot find a word, he may think of semantically related words that could be used into a...