| Literature DB >> 30206797 |
Graham G Scott1, Anne Keitel2, Marc Becirspahic3, Bo Yao4, Sara C Sereno5,6.
Abstract
The Glasgow Norms are a set of normative ratings for 5,553 English words on nine psycholinguistic dimensions: arousal, valence, dominance, concreteness, imageability, familiarity, age of acquisition, semantic size, and gender association. The Glasgow Norms are unique in several respects. First, the corpus itself is relatively large, while simultaneously providing norms across a substantial number of lexical dimensions. Second, for any given subset of words, the same participants provided ratings across all nine dimensions (33 participants/word, on average). Third, two novel dimensions-semantic size and gender association-are included. Finally, the corpus contains a set of 379 ambiguous words that are presented either alone (e.g., toast) or with information that selects an alternative sense (e.g., toast (bread), toast (speech)). The relationships between the dimensions of the Glasgow Norms were initially investigated by assessing their correlations. In addition, a principal component analysis revealed four main factors, accounting for 82% of the variance (Visualization, Emotion, Salience, and Exposure). The validity of the Glasgow Norms was established via comparisons of our ratings to 18 different sets of current psycholinguistic norms. The dimension of size was tested with megastudy data, confirming findings from past studies that have explicitly examined this variable. Alternative senses of ambiguous words (i.e., disambiguated forms), when discordant on a given dimension, seemingly led to appropriately distinct ratings. Informal comparisons between the ratings of ambiguous words and of their alternative senses showed different patterns that likely depended on several factors (the number of senses, their relative strengths, and the rating scales themselves). Overall, the Glasgow Norms provide a valuable resource-in particular, for researchers investigating the role of word recognition in language comprehension.Entities:
Keywords: Age of acquisition; Arousal; Concreteness; Dominance; Familiarity; Gender association; Imageability; Psycholinguistic norms; Semantic size; Valence
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30206797 PMCID: PMC6538586 DOI: 10.3758/s13428-018-1099-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Behav Res Methods ISSN: 1554-351X
Inventory of English word norms
| Dimension(s) | Participants/Item | Source | |
|---|---|---|---|
| AROU, VAL, DOM | 1,034 | 50 on average | Bradley and Lang ( |
| AROU, VAL, DOM | 13,915 | 18–30 for most items | Warriner, Kuperman, and Brysbaert ( |
| CNC | 37,058 | at least 25 | Brysbaert, Warriner, and Kuperman ( |
| IMAG (monosyllabic words) | 3,000 | 31 | Cortese and Fugett ( |
| IMAG (disyllabic words) | 3,000 | 35 | Schock, Cortese, and Khanna ( |
| CNC, IMAG | 925 | 28 (CNC), 30 (IMAG) | Paivio, Yuille, and Madigan ( |
| CNC, IMAG | 1,080 | 50 | Friendly, Franklin, Hoffman, and Rubin ( |
| CNC, IMAG, FAM | 2,854 | 54–65 | Toglia and Battig ( |
| CNC, IMAG, FAM, AOA | 1,944 | 35–37 | Gilhooly and Logie ( |
| CNC, IMAG, FAM, AOA (homograph meanings) | 905 | 35–37 | Gilhooly and Logie ( |
| IMAG, FAM, AOA | 1,526 | 20 | Stadthagen-Gonzalez and Davis ( |
| IMAG, FAM, AOA | 629 | 21 (IMAG), 14 (FAM), 15 (AOA) | Juhasz, Lai, and Woodcock ( |
| IMAG, FAM | 2,311 | 16 (IMAG), 47–49 (FAM) | Clark and Paivio ( |
| IMAG, AOA | 2,694 | 78 (IMAG), 45 (AOA) | Bird, Franklin, and Howard ( |
| IMAG, AOA | 2,204 | 277 | Davies, Izura, Socas, and Dominguez ( |
| AOA (monosyllabic words) | 3,000 | 32 | Cortese and Khanna ( |
| AOA (disyllabic words) | 3,000 | 32 | Schock, Cortese, Khanna, and Toppi ( |
| AOA | 30,124 | 18–22 for most items | Kuperman, Stadthagen-Gonzalez, and Brysbaert ( |
| AOA (homograph meanings) | 3,460 | 30 | Khanna and Cortese ( |
| GEND | 600 | 356 | Crawford, Leynes, Mayhorn, and Bink ( |
For each word norm, the relevant semantic dimension(s), number of words tested, number of participants per item, and citation are specified. Selected word norms comprise those having more than 500 lexical items
AROU arousal; VAL valence; DOM dominance; CNC concreteness; IMAG imageability (“imagery” in earlier norms); FAM familiarity; AOA age of acquisition; GEND gender association
aPaivio et al. also measured meaningfulness. bToglia and Battig also measured meaningfulness, pleasantness, categorizability, and number of attributes or features. cGilhooly and Logie (1980a) also measured ambiguity. dJuhasz et al. also measured meaning dominance, semantic transparency, and sensory experience. eClark and Paivio also measured an additional 13 dimensions, but only on the original set of 925 items from Paivio et al.
Age and gender profile of participants
| Unique participants | All participants | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age ( | # Lists ( | Age | |||
| Female | 599 (72) | 21.5 (7.6) | 1.6 (1.3) | 960 (70) | 22.6 |
| Male | 230 (28) | 22.3 (6.9) | 1.8 (1.6) | 409 (30) | 23.5 |
| All | 829 (100) | 21.7 (7.4) | 1.7 (1.4) | 1,368 (100) | 22.8 |
The number of participants, age, and average number of lists completed are provided by grouping and gender. “Unique participants” comprise individuals, some of whom provided ratings for more than one list of words; “all participants” represent the total number of participants responding to all lists, and does not take into account whether any given participant took part in more than one list. The majority of participants, 69%, completed a single list of words. The remaining percentages of individual participants completing more than one list are as follows: 17% did two lists, 3% did three lists, 8% did four lists, and 3% did eight lists
Profile of the numbers of responses across dimensions
|
| AROU | VAL | DOM | CNC | IMAG | FAM | AOA | SIZE | GEND | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 5,553 |
| 33.31 | 33.54 | 33.24 | 33.34 | 33.30 | 32.36 | 33.94 | 33.30 | 33.25 |
|
| 3.72 | 3.73 | 3.73 | 3.80 | 3.74 | 3.60 | 3.69 | 3.79 | 3.85 | |
| range | 13–70 | 15–71 | 14–69 | 11–70 | 14–70 | 22–67 | 17–70 | 13–70 | 15–69 | |
| 55 |
| 65.73 | 65.96 | 65.31 | 65.33 | 64.84 | 61.18 | 66.75 | 65.96 | 64.64 |
|
| 1.57 | 1.55 | 2.01 | 2.16 | 2.43 | 3.20 | 1.51 | 1.96 | 2.44 | |
| range | 61–70 | 63–71 | 61–69 | 60–70 | 59–70 | 53–67 | 64–70 | 60–70 | 59–69 | |
| 5,498 |
| 32.99 | 33.22 | 32.92 | 33.02 | 32.99 | 32.07 | 33.61 | 32.98 | 32.94 |
|
| 1.83 | 1.85 | 1.90 | 2.05 | 2.01 | 2.15 | 1.68 | 1.92 | 2.22 | |
| range | 13–36 | 15–36 | 14–36 | 11–36 | 14–36 | 22–35 | 17–36 | 13–36 | 15–36 |
Profile of the number of responses to the overall corpus (N = 5,553), the subset of words (N = 55) repeated across the 808- and 4,800-word lists, and the majority of words (N = 5,498) presented in only one of the two lists
AROU arousal; VAL valence; DOM dominance; CNC concreteness; IMAG imageability; FAM familiarity; AOA age of acquisition; SIZE semantic size; GEND gender association
Descriptive statistics of the nine dimensions of the Glasgow Norms
| Dimension | Scale range |
|
|
|---|---|---|---|
| AROU | 1–9 | 4.63 | 1.10 |
| VAL | 1–9 | 5.10 | 1.55 |
| DOM | 1–9 | 5.07 | 0.91 |
| CNC | 1–7 | 4.64 | 1.42 |
| IMAG | 1–7 | 4.79 | 1.35 |
| FAM | 1–7 | 5.26 | 0.93 |
| AOA | 1–7 | 4.13 | 1.24 |
| SIZE | 1–7 | 4.09 | 1.02 |
| GEND | 1–7 | 4.12 | 0.91 |
Scale ranges and mean (M) and standard deviation (SD) values for the nine psycholinguistic dimensions of the Glasgow Norms
AROU arousal; VAL valence; DOM dominance; CNC concreteness; IMAG imageability; FAM familiarity; AOA age of acquisition; SIZE semantic size; GEND gender association
Correlations between dimensions of the Glasgow Norms
| AROU | VAL | DOM | CNC | IMAG | FAM | AOA | SIZE | GEND | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| AROU |
| ||||||||
| VAL | .35 |
| |||||||
| DOM | .34 |
|
| ||||||
| CNC | – .25 | (.05) | (.05) |
| |||||
| IMAG | – .10 | .10 | .08 |
|
| ||||
| FAM | .18 | .30 | .23 | .10 | .22 |
| |||
| AOA | (.00) | – .19 | – .14 | – .38 | – .49 |
|
| ||
| SIZE |
| .12 | .09 | – .41 | – .33 | (.05) | .22 |
| |
| GEND | – .11 | – .42 | – .09 | .15 | .07 | – .21 | .15 | .15 |
|
Spearman coefficients for all combinations of scales. All correlations are significant (p < .01; Bonferroni corrected), except those listed in parentheses. Tests printed in bold are those considered large, with rs >|±.50| (Cohen, 1988)
AROU arousal; VAL valence; DOM dominance; CNC concreteness; IMAG imageability; FAM familiarity; AOA age of acquisition; SIZE semantic size; GEND gender association
Fig. 1Quadratic fits with semantic size or gender association that explain more than 18% of variance. R2 values, F values, and significance for the linear and quadratic fits for all combinations of dimensions can be found in Tables S4 and S5 of the supplementary materials
Factor loadings for all dimensions of the Glasgow Norms
| Factor 1: | Factor 2: | Factor 3: | Factor 4: | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Visualization | Emotion | Salience | Exposure | |
| CNC |
| .098 | – .083 | – .053 |
| IMAG |
| .116 | – .013 | – .220 |
| VAL | .025 |
| – .163 | – .016 |
| DOM | .170 |
| .101 | .103 |
| SIZE | – .344 | .086 |
| – .074 |
| GEND | .446 | – .283 |
| .238 |
| AROU | – .242 | .443 |
| – .211 |
| FAM | – .026 | – .036 | .081 |
|
| AOA | – .286 | .068 | .087 |
|
| %Var | 29.77 | 25.87 | 13.18 | 12.97 |
| %CumVar | 29.77 | 55.64 | 68.82 | 81.79 |
Reported are loadings of an oblique rotation matrix (direct oblimin) on four factors. Loadings >|±.50| are highlighted in bold. Explained common variance (%Var) is given for individual factors, as well as the cumulative variance (%CumVar)
CNC concreteness; IMAG imageability; VAL valence; DOM dominance; SIZE semantic size; GEND gender association; AROU arousal; FAM familiarity; AOA age of acquisition
Correlations between the Glasgow Norms and other English word norms
| Norms |
|
| AROU | VAL | DOM | CNC | IMAG | FAM | AOA | GEND |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 1,034 | 951 |
|
|
| |||||
| 2 | 13,915 | 4,073 |
|
|
| |||||
| 3 | 37,058 | 4,445 |
| |||||||
| 4 | 3,000 | 1,363 |
| |||||||
| 5 | 3,000 | 1,308 |
| |||||||
| 6 | 925 | 789 |
|
| ||||||
| 7 | 1,944 | 902 |
|
|
|
| ||||
| 8 | 905 | 136 |
|
|
|
| ||||
| 9 | 1,526 | 1,370 |
|
|
| |||||
| 10 | 629 | 61 |
|
|
| |||||
| 11 | 2,311 | 1,390 | .42 |
| ||||||
| 12 | 2,694 | 994 |
|
| ||||||
| 13 | 2,204 | 722 |
|
| ||||||
| 14 | 3,000 | 1,363 |
| |||||||
| 15 | 3,000 | 1,308 |
| |||||||
| 16 | 30,124 | 4,283 |
| |||||||
| 17 | 3,460 | 525 | .20 | |||||||
| 18 | 600 | 336 |
|
Pearson coefficients for 18 sets of norms reporting scales corresponding to the Glasgow Norms (note that no norms were available for semantic size). For each of the norms, the number of total items (Nsource) and the number of identical items within the Glasgow Norms (Noverlap) that were used for the correlations are indicated. Norms 8 and 17 examine different senses of ambiguous words. All correlations were highly significant (ps < .0001, Bonferroni corrected). Correlations with a large effect (r > .5, see Cohen, 1988) are printed in bold. References for the 18 norms are as follows: 1 = Bradley and Lang (1999); 2 = Warriner et al. (2013); 3 = Brysbaert et al. (2014); 4 = Cortese and Fugett (2004); 5 = Schock, Cortese, and Khanna (2012); 6 = Paivio et al. (1968); 7 = Gilhooly and Logie (1980a); 8 = Gilhooly and Logie (1980b); 9 = Stadthagen-Gonzalez and Davis (2006); 10 = Juhasz et al. (2015); 11 = Clark and Paivio (2004); 12 = Bird et al. (2001); 13 = Davies et al. (2016); 14 = Cortese and Khanna (2008); 15 = Schock, Cortese, et al. (2012); 16 = Kuperman et al. (2012); 17 = Khanna and Cortese (2011); and 18 = Crawford et al. (2004)
AROU arousal; VAL valence; DOM dominance; CNC concreteness; IMAG imageability; FAM familiarity; AOA age of acquisition; SIZE semantic size; GEND gender association
SIZE Effects: Factor Loadings for the Extracted Principal Components
| PC1 | PC2 | PC3 | PC4 | PC5 | PC6 | PC7 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Frequency |
| 0.16 | |||||
| Length | –0.10 | 0.10 |
| –0.13 | |||
| CNC |
| –0.22 | |||||
| IMAG |
| 0.19 | |||||
| AROU |
| 0.45 | |||||
| |VAL| | –0.21 |
| –0.22 | ||||
| FAM | 0.11 | 0.10 | 0.10 |
| |||
| AOA | –0.35 | –0.12 | 0.31 |
| |||
| DOM |
| 0.11 | |||||
| GEND |
| –0.10 |
Note: Factor loadings ≥ |±.10| are shown and factor loadings > |±.50| are highlighted in bold. Frequency was measured in written occurrences per million as per the British National Corpus (2007; Davies, 2004) and Length in number of letters
CNC concreteness; IMAG imageability; AROU arousal; |VAL| absolute valence (i.e., the 1-9 scale was collapsed around its midpoint so that higher values would reflect more extreme valence, regardless of whether they were rated as positive or negative); FAM familiarity; AOA age of acquisition (negative loading); DOM dominance; GEND gender association; SIZE semantic size
Fig. 2(a) Ratings of alternative senses of ambiguous words are indicated across dimensions. For each dimension of the Glasgow Norms, an example ambiguous word is listed across the top. The ratings corresponding to the alternative senses (defined in parentheses) are indicated beneath each ambiguous word. (b) Ratings of the ambiguous word shell and its alternative senses (“sea” and “military”) are indicated across all dimensions of the Glasgow Norms. AROU arousal; VAL valence; DOM dominance; CNC concreteness; IMAG imageability; FAM familiarity; AOA age of acquisition; SIZE semantic size; GEND gender association
SIZE Effects: Corresponding Multiple Linear Regression Results
| Predictors |
|
|
|
|
|---|---|---|---|---|
| SIZE | –10.51 | 1.21 | –8.68 | <.001 |
| PC1 (CNC, IMAG) | –5.99 | 0.96 | –6.21 | <.001 |
| PC2 (AROU, |VAL|) | 4.35 | 1.08 | 4.04 | <.001 |
| PC3 (Frequency) | –7.28 | 0.89 | –8.17 | <.001 |
| PC4 (DOM) | –3.99 | 0.91 | –4.39 | <.001 |
| PC5 (GEND) | 3.65 | 0.93 | 3.91 | <.001 |
| PC6 (Length) | 40.44 | 0.94 | 43.01 | <.001 |
| PC7 (FAM, -AOA) | –45.44 | 0.90 | –50.3 | <.001 |
Note: Frequency was measured in written occurrences per million as per the British National Corpus (2007; Davies, 2004) and Length in number of letters
CNC concreteness; IMAG imageability; AROU arousal; |VAL| absolute valence (i.e., the 1-9 scale was collapsed around its midpoint so that higher values would reflect more extreme valence, regardless of whether they were rated as positive or negative); FAM familiarity; AOA age of acquisition (negative loading); DOM dominance; GEND gender association; SIZE semantic size