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Listeners and Readers Generalize Their Experience With Word Meanings Across Modalities

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dc.creator Gilbert, Rebecca
dc.creator Davis, Matthew
dc.creator Gaskell, MG
dc.creator Rodd, JM
dc.date 2018-07-25T09:41:03Z
dc.date 2018-07-25T09:41:03Z
dc.date 2018-02-01
dc.date.accessioned 2019-03-20T08:23:16Z
dc.date.available 2019-03-20T08:23:16Z
dc.identifier
dc.identifier 10.17863/CAM.25775
dc.identifier.uri https://evidence.thinkportal.org/handle/123456789/32279
dc.identifier.uri https://www.repository.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/278434
dc.description Research has shown that adults' lexical-semantic representations are surprisingly malleable. For instance, the interpretation of ambiguous words (e.g., bark) is influenced by experience such that recently encountered meanings become more readily available (Rodd et al., 2016, 2013). However, the mechanism underlying this word-meaning priming effect remains unclear, and competing accounts make different predictions about the extent to which information about word meanings that is gained within one modality (e.g., speech) is transferred to the other modality (e.g., reading) to aid comprehension. In two Web-based experiments, ambiguous target words were primed with either written or spoken sentences that biased their interpretation toward a subordinate meaning, or were unprimed. About 20 min after the prime exposure, interpretation of these target words was tested by presenting them in either written or spoken form, using word association (Experiment 1, N = 78) and speeded semantic relatedness decisions (Experiment 2, N = 181). Both experiments replicated the auditory unimodal priming effect shown previously (Rodd et al., 2016, 2013) and revealed significant cross-modal priming: primed meanings were retrieved more frequently and swiftly across all primed conditions compared with the unprimed baseline. Furthermore, there were no reliable differences in priming levels between unimodal and cross-modal prime-test conditions. These results indicate that recent experience with ambiguous word meanings can bias the reader's or listener's later interpretation of these words in a modality-general way. We identify possible loci of this effect within the context of models of long-term priming and ambiguity resolution.
dc.language eng
dc.publisher American Psychological Association
dc.publisher Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning Memory and Cognition
dc.rights Attribution 4.0 International
dc.rights http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
dc.subject language
dc.subject lexical ambiguity
dc.subject , long-term priming
dc.subject modality effects
dc.subject semantic ambiguity
dc.title Listeners and Readers Generalize Their Experience With Word Meanings Across Modalities
dc.type Article


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