Revisiting the concreteness effect: Non-arbitrary mappings between form and concreteness of English words influence lexical processing

IF 2.8 1区 心理学 Q1 PSYCHOLOGY, EXPERIMENTAL Cognition Pub Date : 2024-10-09 DOI:10.1016/j.cognition.2024.105972
Elaine Kearney , Katie L. McMahon , Frank Guenther , Joanne Arciuli , Greig I. de Zubicaray
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Abstract

How do we represent and process abstract and concrete concepts? The “concreteness effect”, in which words with more concrete meanings are processed more quickly and accurately across a range of language tasks compared to abstract ones, suggests a differential conceptual organization of these words in the brain. However, concrete words tend to be marked by specific phonotactic features, such as having fewer syllables and more phonological neighbours. It is unclear whether these non-arbitrary form-meaning relationships that systematically denote the concreteness of a word impact language processing. In the current study, we first establish the extent of systematic mappings between phonological/phonetic features and concreteness ratings in a large set of monosyllabic and polysyllabic English words (i.e., concreteness form typicality), then demonstrate that they significantly influence lexical processing using behavioural megastudy datasets. Surface form features predicted a significant proportion of variance in concreteness ratings of monomorphemic words (25 %) which increased with the addition of polymorphemic forms (43 %). In addition, concreteness form typicality was a significant predictor of performance on visual and auditory lexical decision, naming, and semantic (concrete/abstract) decision tasks, after controlling for a range of psycholinguistic variables and concreteness ratings. Overall, our results provide the first evidence that concreteness form typicality influences lexical processing. We discuss theoretical implications for interpretations of the concreteness effect and models of language processing that have yet to incorporate non-arbitrary relationships between form and meaning into their feature sets.
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重新审视具体性效应:英语单词的形式和具体程度之间的非任意映射影响词汇加工。
我们如何表示和处理抽象和具体概念?具体词义效应 "表明,在一系列语言任务中,具体词义的词语比抽象词义的词语处理得更快、更准确。然而,具体词语往往具有特定的语音战术特征,如音节较少、音素邻接较多。目前还不清楚这些非任意性的形义关系是否会对语言加工产生影响。在本研究中,我们首先在一大批单音节和多音节英语单词中建立了语音/音素特征与具体程度评级之间的系统映射关系(即具体程度形式典型性),然后利用行为大研究数据集证明了它们对词汇加工的显著影响。表面形式特征预示了单音节词具体词性评分的很大一部分差异(25%),而随着多音节形式的增加,这一比例也随之增加(43%)。此外,在控制了一系列心理语言学变量和具体词性评分之后,具体词性形式的典型性对视觉和听觉词汇决策、命名和语义(具体/抽象)决策任务的成绩有显著的预测作用。总之,我们的研究结果首次证明了具体形式的典型性会影响词汇加工。我们讨论了对具体性效应的解释和语言加工模型的理论意义,这些模型尚未将形式和意义之间的非任意关系纳入其特征集。
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来源期刊
Cognition
Cognition PSYCHOLOGY, EXPERIMENTAL-
CiteScore
6.40
自引率
5.90%
发文量
283
期刊介绍: Cognition is an international journal that publishes theoretical and experimental papers on the study of the mind. It covers a wide variety of subjects concerning all the different aspects of cognition, ranging from biological and experimental studies to formal analysis. Contributions from the fields of psychology, neuroscience, linguistics, computer science, mathematics, ethology and philosophy are welcome in this journal provided that they have some bearing on the functioning of the mind. In addition, the journal serves as a forum for discussion of social and political aspects of cognitive science.
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