scholarly journals Baring the bones: the lexico-semantic association of bone with strength in Melanesia and the study of colexification

2021 ◽  
Vol 0 (0) ◽  
Author(s):  
Antoinette Schapper

Abstract In this article I demonstrate that there is a pervasive lexico-semantic association bones are strength in the languages of Melanesia, but that its linguistic expression is highly varied; languages are scattered along a lexical-to-clausal cline in their expression of the association between bone and strength, with a large number of language-specific idioms based on the association to be observed in Melanesia. I argue that the striking areality of this lexico-semantic association is readily missed in top-down approaches to lexical semantic typology that rely, for instance, on databases of word lists, or on narrow search domains limited to the meanings of simplex lexemes.

2013 ◽  
Vol 333-335 ◽  
pp. 791-794
Author(s):  
Da Zhen Lin ◽  
Xian Ming Lin ◽  
Dong Lin Cao

The main challenge of Topic Detection and Tracking (TDT) for Blog is the insufficient information in a topic description and the lack of key words input by users. We propose a Two-layer KL Distance approach which combines the KL distance model with a lexical semantic association matrix model. First, the KL Distance model captured the weights of Initial feature words. Second, the KL Distance model was used again to estimate weights of words linked with initial feature words in the lexical Semantic Association Matrix. Extensive experiments show the advantages of our method over the baselines as well as the effectiveness of the two-layer of KL Distance.


2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Susanne Eisenhauer ◽  
Christian J. Fiebach ◽  
Benjamin Gagl

AbstractWord familiarity and predictive context facilitate visual word processing, leading to faster recognition times and reduced neuronal responses. Previously, models with and without top-down connections, including lexical-semantic, pre-lexical (e.g., orthographic/ phonological), and visual processing levels were successful in accounting for these facilitation effects. Here we systematically assessed context-based facilitation with a repetition priming task and explicitly dissociated pre-lexical and lexical processing levels using a pseudoword familiarization procedure. Experiment 1 investigated the temporal dynamics of neuronal facilitation effects with magnetoencephalography (MEG; N=38 human participants) while Experiment 2 assessed behavioral facilitation effects (N=24 human participants). Across all stimulus conditions, MEG demonstrated context-based facilitation across multiple time windows starting at 100 ms, in occipital brain areas. This finding indicates context based-facilitation at an early visual processing level. In both experiments, we furthermore found an interaction of context and lexical familiarity, such that stimuli with associated meaning showed the strongest context-dependent facilitation in brain activation and behavior. Using MEG, this facilitation effect could be localized to the left anterior temporal lobe at around 400 ms, indicating within-level (i.e., exclusively lexical-semantic) facilitation but no top-down effects on earlier processing stages. Increased pre-lexical familiarity (in pseudowords familiarized utilizing training) did not enhance or reduce context effects significantly. We conclude that context based-facilitation is achieved within visual and lexical processing levels. Finally, by testing alternative hypotheses derived from mechanistic accounts of repetition suppression, we suggest that the facilitatory context effects found here are implemented using a predictive coding mechanism.Significance StatementThe goal of reading is to derive meaning from script. This highly automatized process benefits from facilitation depending on word familiarity and text context. Facilitation might occur exclusively within each level of word processing (i.e., visual, pre-lexical, and/or lexical-semantic) but could alternatively also propagate in a top-down manner from higher to lower levels. To test the relevance of these two alternative accounts at each processing level, we combined a pseudoword learning approach controlling for letter string familiarity with repetition priming. We found enhanced context-based facilitation at the lexical-semantic but not pre-lexical processing stage, and no evidence of top-down facilitation from lexical-semantic to earlier word recognition processes. We also identified predictive coding as the most likely mechanism underlying within-level context-based facilitation.


2021 ◽  
Vol 5 (1) ◽  
pp. p28
Author(s):  
Mahmud Hussein Wardat

This study deals with nouns derived from body part terminology in Jordanian Arabic. It aims at identifying those nouns and examining their semantic association with body part terms. It indicates that a large number of the nouns are semantically related to their corresponding body parts; thus, their meaning could be predicted from the meaning of body part terms. Further, the physical characteristics of position, shape and function of body parts are the basis of the semantic association. However, very few of the derived nouns are not semantically related to body part terms. In addition, all the derived nouns designate objects in a variety of lexical semantic domains external to the body part domain. Finally, it is concluded that Jordanian Arabic has the capability of expanding its lexicon on the basis of body part terminology.


1998 ◽  
Vol 60 ◽  
pp. 77-85
Author(s):  
Evy Visch-Brink ◽  
Gianfranco Denes ◽  
Dick Stronks

The semantic system has a central position in the language processing system as the intermediate between language production and language comprehension. The system itself may be separated into distinctive components: visual and lexical semantics. Their is much discussion about the interference between the visual and lexical semantic system and about the quality of the processing routes. Some authors propose a unitary amodal system, other authors plead for modality-specific semantic systems. The stage of perceptual categorization is considered both as optional and as obligatory. The objective of this study is: to investigate visual and lexical semantic processing in aphasic patients (n=74) (control groups: right- hemispheric patients (n=10) and normals (n=96)) (i), to examine the relation between semantic deficits and aphasia type and severity (ii) and to explore the relation between presemantic and semantic visual processing. Instruments to measure presemantic and semantic processing: Object Decision (Riddoch & Humphreys, 1987) and the verbal and visual Semantic Association Test (Visch-Brink e.a.., 1993). Results: aphasie patients as a group were significantly impaired both in Object Decision and visual and verbal semantic processing. Some patients appeared to have a selective deficit in visual or verbal semantic processing (1). No correlation was found between the performance on the visual or verbal Semantic Association Test and the aphasia type or severity (ii). In some patients a dissociation was found between presemantic and semantic visual processing (iii). Conclusions: Visual and lexical semantic processing in aphasia may selectively disturbed, which pleads rather for a multiple than for a unitary semantic processing system. Aphasia type and the severity of aphasia do not function as indicators for the presence of a visual and/or lexical semantic disorder. For the interpretation of the meaning of a picture, the stage of perceptual categorization can be bypassed.


2018 ◽  
Vol 6 ◽  
pp. 73-81 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wasyl Greszczuk

The article analyzes the means of word-formative motivation in the generation of a text. Text oriented functions of word-formative motivation are caused by the method of its representation in the text either through a word-formative structure of derived words, or by a derivational pair „form – derived”, or by a whole motivating judgment. If derivative motivation in the text is expressed only by a word building structure of a derivative as a carrier of its consequences, then it serves as a source of lexical-semantic construction material with a property of double reference. Word-formative motivation, which is expressed in the text by a word-formative pair „form – derived” or a motivational judgment, serves as a means of implementing connectivity, primarily local. Various methods of textual usage of word-formative motivation serve as a means of creating an artistic image, the formation of a linguistic expression, artistic expression of a text.


Linguistics ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 50 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Anna A. Zalizniak ◽  
Maria Bulakh ◽  
Dmitrij Ganenkov ◽  
Ilya Gruntov ◽  
Timur Maisak ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dayse Souza ◽  
Henrique Salmazo- Silva ◽  
Roberta Baradel ◽  
Reynaldo Sandrini ◽  
Katerina Lukasova ◽  
...  

Background: Individuals with Parkinson’s Disease present motor and cognitive impairment. In the language domain PD is a good model to study the functional contribution of the motor system to language processing. Objective: To investigate the performance of Parkinson’s disease patients on a lexical-semantic processing task of action verbs, compared to cognitively healthy controls. Methods: Parkinson’s patients performed the naming (n=25) and semantic association (n=19) tests of the Kisssing and Dancing Test - KDT, adapted by Baradel (2016). Patients were compared to cognitively healthy controls (n=44). Results: We observed a difference in performance on the naming (t[47]=-2.609, p=0.012) and semantic verb association (t[36]=-4.795, p=0.000) tasks between the groups. Parkinson’s patients had lower mean scores than healthy controls on both the naming and semantic association tasks. Conclusion: Parkinson’s patients may exhibit difficulties in lexical and semantic access of language with action content compared to healthy subjects. These results are consistent with Embodied Cognition and may support therapeutic alternatives in the field of language neuroscience.


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