Literature DB >> 23722978

The truth about chickens and bats: ambiguity avoidance distinguishes types of polysemy.

Hugh Rabagliati1, Jesse Snedeker.   

Abstract

Words mean different things in different contexts, a phenomenon called polysemy. People talk about lines of both people and poetry, and about both long distances and long times. Polysemy lets a limited vocabulary capture a great variety of experiences, while highlighting commonalities. But how is this achieved? Are polysemous senses contextually driven modifications of core meanings, or must each sense be memorized separately? We show that participants' ability to avoid referentially ambiguous descriptions of pictures named by polysemous words provides evidence for both possibilities. When senses followed a regular pattern (e.g., animals and the foodstuffs derived from them; noisy chicken, tasty chicken), participants avoided using ambiguous labels in referentially ambiguous situations (e.g., both types of chicken were present), a result indicating that they noticed a common meaning. But when senses were idiosyncratically related (e.g., sheet of glass, drinking glass), participants frequently produced ambiguous labels, a result indicating that the meanings were separately stored. We discuss implications for the relationship between word meanings and concepts.

Entities:  

Keywords:  language; linguistics; meaning; psycholinguistics; semantic memory

Mesh:

Year:  2013        PMID: 23722978     DOI: 10.1177/0956797612472205

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Psychol Sci        ISSN: 0956-7976


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3.  What Homophones Say about Words.

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4.  Sorry, Not Sorry: The independent role of multiple phonetic cues in signaling the difference between two word meanings.

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