First Online: 10 September 2018Most words are ambiguous, with interpretation dependent on context. Advancing theories of ambiguity resolution is important for any general theory of language processing, and for resolving inconsistencies in observed ambiguity effects across experimental tasks. Focusing on homonyms (words such as bank with unrelated meanings EDGE OF A RIVER vs. FINANCIAL INSTITUTION), the present work advances theories and methods for estimating the relative frequency of their meanings, a factor that shapes observed ambiguity effects. We develop a new method for estimating meaning frequency based on the meaning of a homonym evoked in lines of movie and television subtitles according to human raters. We also replicate and exten...
Theoretical linguistic accounts of lexical ambiguity distinguish between homonymy, where words that ...
First published: 21 May 2021Lexical ambiguity—the phenomenon of a single word having multiple, disti...
When a homonym (e.g., bark) is encountered in a sentential context that biases its interpretation to...
<p>Words that are homonyms-that is, for which a single written and spoken form is associated with mu...
Published online: 15 August 2015Relative meaning frequency is a critical factor to consider in stud...
Summary : Free association norms and meaning frequencies for 162 ambiguous words Homonyms are ambigu...
International audienceHomonyms are ambiguous words having several unrelated meanings (for example, b...
This data set contains British-English ratings of meaning frequencies for 100 homonyms, i.e., words ...
This thesis explores the processing of lexical ambiguity: words with several unrelated meanings (hom...
This study compares homonym learning to novel word learning by three- to four-year-old children to d...
This data set contains British-English ratings of meaning frequencies for 100 homonyms, i.e., words ...
Summary : The role of the relative frequency of different meanings of homographs in lexical access. ...
Models of speech production disagree on whether or not homonyms have a shared word-form representati...
International audienceSeveral studies have provided evidence that ambiguous words are recognized fas...
Although prior research has provided descriptive statistics for homographic words, most studies have...
Theoretical linguistic accounts of lexical ambiguity distinguish between homonymy, where words that ...
First published: 21 May 2021Lexical ambiguity—the phenomenon of a single word having multiple, disti...
When a homonym (e.g., bark) is encountered in a sentential context that biases its interpretation to...
<p>Words that are homonyms-that is, for which a single written and spoken form is associated with mu...
Published online: 15 August 2015Relative meaning frequency is a critical factor to consider in stud...
Summary : Free association norms and meaning frequencies for 162 ambiguous words Homonyms are ambigu...
International audienceHomonyms are ambiguous words having several unrelated meanings (for example, b...
This data set contains British-English ratings of meaning frequencies for 100 homonyms, i.e., words ...
This thesis explores the processing of lexical ambiguity: words with several unrelated meanings (hom...
This study compares homonym learning to novel word learning by three- to four-year-old children to d...
This data set contains British-English ratings of meaning frequencies for 100 homonyms, i.e., words ...
Summary : The role of the relative frequency of different meanings of homographs in lexical access. ...
Models of speech production disagree on whether or not homonyms have a shared word-form representati...
International audienceSeveral studies have provided evidence that ambiguous words are recognized fas...
Although prior research has provided descriptive statistics for homographic words, most studies have...
Theoretical linguistic accounts of lexical ambiguity distinguish between homonymy, where words that ...
First published: 21 May 2021Lexical ambiguity—the phenomenon of a single word having multiple, disti...
When a homonym (e.g., bark) is encountered in a sentential context that biases its interpretation to...