Literature DB >> 23784009

Predicting raters' transparency judgments of English and Chinese morphological constituents using latent semantic analysis.

Hsueh-Cheng Wang1, Li-Chuan Hsu, Yi-Min Tien, Marc Pomplun.   

Abstract

The morphological constituents of English compounds (e.g., "butter" and "fly" for "butterfly") and two-character Chinese compounds may differ in meaning from the whole word. Subjective differences and ambiguity of transparency make judgments difficult, and a computational alternative based on a general model might be a way to average across subjective differences. In the present study, we propose two approaches based on latent semantic analysis (Landauer & Dumais in Psychological Review 104:211-240, 1997): Model 1 compares the semantic similarity between a compound word and each of its constituents, and Model 2 derives the dominant meaning of a constituent from a clustering analysis of morphological family members (e.g., "butterfingers" or "buttermilk" for "butter"). The proposed models successfully predicted participants' transparency ratings, and we recommend that experimenters use Model 1 for English compounds and Model 2 for Chinese compounds, on the basis of differences in raters' morphological processing in the different writing systems. The dominance of lexical meaning, semantic transparency, and the average similarity between all pairs within a morphological family are provided, and practical applications for future studies are discussed.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2014        PMID: 23784009      PMCID: PMC3841261          DOI: 10.3758/s13428-013-0360-z

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Behav Res Methods        ISSN: 1554-351X


  20 in total

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Journal:  Brain Lang       Date:  2004 Jul-Sep       Impact factor: 2.381

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6.  The role of semantic transparency in the processing of English compound words.

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7.  A TMS examination of semantic radical combinability effects in Chinese character recognition.

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Journal:  Brain Res       Date:  2006-02-24       Impact factor: 3.252

8.  Extending the e-z reader model of eye movement control to chinese readers.

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9.  Parafoveal semantic information extraction in traditional Chinese reading.

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10.  Semantic distance norms computed from an electronic dictionary (WordNet).

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  3 in total

1.  Hong Kong Chinese character psycholinguistic norms: ratings of 4376 single Chinese characters on semantic radical transparency, age-of-acquisition, familiarity, imageability, and concreteness.

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Journal:  Behav Res Methods       Date:  2022-08-24

2.  Semantic ambiguity effects on traditional Chinese character naming: A corpus-based approach.

Authors:  Ya-Ning Chang; Chia-Ying Lee
Journal:  Behav Res Methods       Date:  2018-12

3.  LADEC: The Large Database of English Compounds.

Authors:  Christina L Gagné; Thomas L Spalding; Daniel Schmidtke
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  3 in total

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