keyword
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38562858/language-abnormalities-in-alzheimer-s-disease-arise-from-reduced-informativeness-a-cross-linguistic-study-in-english-and-persian
#41
Sabereh Bayat, Mahya Santai, Mehrdad Mohammad Panahi, Amirhossein Khodadadi, Mahdieh Ghassimi, Sahar Rezaei, Sara Besharat, Zahra Mahboubi, Mostafa Almasi, Morteza Sanei Taheri, Bradford C Dickerson, Neguine Rezaii
INTRODUCTION: This research investigates the psycholinguistic origins of language impairments in Alzheimer's Disease (AD), questioning if these impairments result from language-specific structural disruptions or from a universal deficit in generating meaningful content. METHODS: Cross-linguistic analysis was conducted on language samples from 184 English and 52 Persian speakers, comprising both AD patients and healthy controls, to extract various language features...
March 22, 2024: medRxiv
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38553456/alignment-of-brain-embeddings-and-artificial-contextual-embeddings-in-natural-language-points-to-common-geometric-patterns
#42
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Ariel Goldstein, Avigail Grinstein-Dabush, Mariano Schain, Haocheng Wang, Zhuoqiao Hong, Bobbi Aubrey, Mariano Schain, Samuel A Nastase, Zaid Zada, Eric Ham, Amir Feder, Harshvardhan Gazula, Eliav Buchnik, Werner Doyle, Sasha Devore, Patricia Dugan, Roi Reichart, Daniel Friedman, Michael Brenner, Avinatan Hassidim, Orrin Devinsky, Adeen Flinker, Uri Hasson
Contextual embeddings, derived from deep language models (DLMs), provide a continuous vectorial representation of language. This embedding space differs fundamentally from the symbolic representations posited by traditional psycholinguistics. We hypothesize that language areas in the human brain, similar to DLMs, rely on a continuous embedding space to represent language. To test this hypothesis, we densely record the neural activity patterns in the inferior frontal gyrus (IFG) of three participants using dense intracranial arrays while they listened to a 30-minute podcast...
March 30, 2024: Nature Communications
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38533420/an-eye-on-semantics-a-study-on-the-influence-of-concreteness-and-predictability-on-early-fixation-durations
#43
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Federica Magnabosco, Olaf Hauk
We used eye-tracking during natural reading to study how semantic control and representation mechanisms interact for the successful comprehension of sentences, by manipulating sentence context and single-word meaning. Specifically, we examined whether a word's semantic characteristic (concreteness) affects first fixation and gaze durations (FFDs and GDs) and whether it interacts with the predictability of a word. We used a linear mixed effects model including several possible psycholinguistic covariates. We found a small but reliable main effect of concreteness and replicated a predictability effect on FFDs, but we found no interaction between the two...
2024: Language, Cognition and Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38530468/influence-of-social-distance-on-foreign-language-effect-in-moral-judgment
#44
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Chuyan Xu, Ruibing Wang, Lin Zhu, Zhichao Liao, Ziye Wang, Yunping Wang, Conghui Liu
Previous research has shown that moral choice depends on language, a phenomenon known as the moral foreign language effect (mFLE). The current study examines the influence of social distance on the mFLE. In Experiment 1, 200 participants were randomly assigned to either close or distant social distance in English or Chinese. In Experiment 2, 188 participants were randomly assigned to either English or Chinese and were presented with eight moral dilemmas, each with five different levels of social distance. After reading the dilemma, participants made a choice on a binary scale (Yes/No) in both Experiments 1 and 2 or on a more sensitive 100-point scale in Experiment 2...
March 26, 2024: Journal of Psycholinguistic Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38528789/computational-modeling-of-the-segmentation-of-sentence-stimuli-from-an-infant-word-finding-study
#45
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Daniel Swingley, Robin Algayres
Computational models of infant word-finding typically operate over transcriptions of infant-directed speech corpora. It is now possible to test models of word segmentation on speech materials, rather than transcriptions of speech. We propose that such modeling efforts be conducted over the speech of the experimental stimuli used in studies measuring infants' capacity for learning from spoken sentences. Correspondence with infant outcomes in such experiments is an appropriate benchmark for models of infants...
March 2024: Cognitive Science
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38526840/value-characteristics-of-the-core-of-the-mental-lexicon-of-native-speakers-of-language-and-culture-in-the-light-of-intercultural-communication
#46
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Fazila Artykbayeva, Aygul Spatay, Abdurassul Raimov, Sholpan Bakirova, Maira Taiteliyeva
The purpose of this study was to consider the core of the mental lexicon of the Kazakh language based on the analysis of associative dictionaries, to determine the basic lexico-semantic groups of words and to compare the basic lexical layer with value categories. This study uses the following methods of linguocultural, comparative, lexico-semantic, and conceptual analysis, as well as analytical and synthetic analysis, with the help of which the main conceptual values of the Kazakh people were studied: spiritual, mental and material...
March 25, 2024: Journal of Psycholinguistic Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38526606/a-richer-vocabulary-of-chinese-personality-traits-leveraging-word-embedding-technology-for-mining-personality-descriptors
#47
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Yigang Ding, Feijun Zheng, Linjie Xu, Xinru Yang, Yiyun Jia
This study uses a data-driven approach to mine the distribution of personality traits among Chinese people in the Chinese social context. Based on the hypothesis of personality lexicology, word embedding technology was employed in machine learning to mine personality vocabulary from Tencent's word embedding database. More than 10,000 Chinese personality descriptors were extracted and analyzed using Gaussian Mixture Model Cluster and Hierarchical clustering analysis. The data was collected from 658 Chinese people randomly from all parts of China through an online questionnaire method...
March 25, 2024: Journal of Psycholinguistic Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38517230/speech-sound-categories-affect-lexical-competition-implications-for-analytic-auditory-training
#48
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Kristi Hendrickson, Katlyn Bay, Philip Combiths, Meaghan Foody, Elizabeth Walker
OBJECTIVES: We provide a novel application of psycholinguistic theories and methods to the field of auditory training to provide preliminary data regarding which minimal pair contrasts are more difficult for listeners with typical hearing to distinguish in real-time. DESIGN: Using eye-tracking, participants heard a word and selected the corresponding image from a display of four: the target word, two unrelated words, and a word from one of four contrast categories (i...
March 22, 2024: Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research: JSLHR
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38513427/a-comparison-of-learning-and-retention-of-a-syntactic-construction-between-cantonese-speaking-children-with-and-without-dld-in-a-priming-task
#49
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Anita M-Y Wong, Cecilia W-S Au, Angel Chan, Mohammad Momenian
Procedural circuit Deficit Hypothesis (PDH) of Developmental Language Disorder (DLD) predicts problems with learning and retention of grammar. Twenty 7- to 9-year-old Cantonese-speaking children with DLD and their typically developing (TD) age peers participated in a syntactic priming task that was given in two sessions one week apart. Production of Indirect Object Relative Clause (IORC) was tested using a probe test before and after the priming task, and one week later. The study involved two cycles of learning and retention, and two levels of prior knowledge...
March 20, 2024: Brain and Language
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38508999/express-the-development-of-lexical-processing-real-time-phonological-competition-and-semantic-activation-in-school-age-children
#50
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Charlotte Jeppsen, Keith Apfelbaum, J Bruce Tomblin, Kelsey Klein, Bob McMurray
Prior research suggests that real-time phonological competition processes are stabilized in early childhood (Fernald et al., 2006). However, recent work suggests that development of these processes continues throughout adolescence (Huang & Snedeker, 2011; Rigler et al., 2015). This study aimed to investigate whether these developmental changes are based solely within the lexical system or are due to domain general changes. This study also aimed to investigate the development of real-time lexical-semantic activation...
March 20, 2024: Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology: QJEP
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38506942/language-reflection-metatextual-analysis
#51
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Kulzat Sadirova, Perizat Sydyk
The article deals with language reflection, verbalization through metatexts, and interpretation. The expression of language reflection is defined in the works of writers and poets. The research is directed at investigating the text, realizing the process of interpreting the works of great poet A. Kunanbayev from the point of linguistic consciousness, and determining the results. The poet conveys information by utilizing various language tools and constructs that prompt self-questioning. The definitions of concepts, classifications, and characteristics related to language reflection are given...
March 20, 2024: Journal of Psycholinguistic Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38492175/an-eye-tracking-study-on-the-processing-of-l2-collocations-the-effect-of-congruency-proficiency-and-transparency
#52
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Dina Abdel Salam El-Dakhs, Suhad Sonbul, Ahmed Masrai
The availability of a first language translation equivalent (i.e., congruency) has repeatedly been shown to influence second-language collocation processing in decontextualized tasks. However, no study to date has examined how L2 speakers process congruent/incongruent collocations on-line in a real-world context. The present study aimed to fill this gap by examining the eye-movement behavior of 31 Arabic-English speakers and 30 native English speakers as they read 20 congruent and 20 incongruent collocations (in addition to 40 control phrases) in short contexts...
March 16, 2024: Journal of Psycholinguistic Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38492044/associations-between-continuous-glucose-monitoring-cgm-metrics-and-psycholinguistic-measures-a-correlational-study
#53
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Francesco Marchini, Andrea Caputo, Alessio Convertino, Chiara Giuliani, Olimpia Bitterman, Dario Pitocco, Riccardo Fornengo, Elisabetta Lovati, Elisa Forte, Laura Sciacca, Angela Napoli
AIM: Recently, the relationship between diabetes and mental health has been widely studied. With the advent of continuous glucose monitoring (CGM), some researchers have been interested in exploring the association between glucose-related metrics and psychological aspects. These studies have primarily relied on self-report questionnaires which present some limitations. Therefore, the present multicenter study aims at testing potential associations between CGM metrics and affective processes derived from narratives about using a CGM sensor...
March 16, 2024: Acta Diabetologica
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38488939/video-captioning-and-subtitles-in-second-language-listening-comprehension-fast-paced-versus-slow-paced-speakers
#54
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Asma Almusharraf, Hassan Saleh Mahdi, Haifa Al-Nofaie, Elham Ghobain, Amal Aljasser
The present study examines the impact of implementing video captioning and subtitles on listening comprehension with special reference to the speaker's speed. A total of 64 undergraduate Saudi EFL learners were assigned into six groups: fast speaker with full captioning, fast speaker with subtitles, fast speaker with no captioning nor subtitles, slow speaker with full captioning, and slow speaker with subtitles, slow speaker with no captioning nor subtitles. Each group was instructed to watch a video in English under its assigned condition and then answered a listening test...
March 15, 2024: Journal of Psycholinguistic Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38484446/graded-and-sharp-transitions-in-semantic-function-in-left-temporal-lobe
#55
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Katya Krieger-Redwood, Xiuyi Wang, Nicholas Souter, Tirso Rene Del Jesus Gonzalez Alam, Jonathan Smallwood, Rebecca L Jackson, Elizabeth Jefferies
Recent work has focussed on how patterns of functional change within the temporal lobe relate to whole-brain dimensions of intrinsic connectivity variation (Margulies et al., 2016). We examined two such 'connectivity gradients' reflecting the separation of (i) unimodal versus heteromodal and (ii) visual versus auditory-motor cortex, examining visually presented verbal associative and feature judgments, plus picture-based context and emotion generation. Functional responses along the first dimension sometimes showed graded change between modality-tuned and heteromodal cortex (in the verbal matching task), and other times showed sharp functional transitions, with deactivation at the extremes and activation in the middle of this gradient (internal generation)...
March 13, 2024: Brain and Language
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38476662/word-frequency-and-predictability-dissociate-in-naturalistic-reading
#56
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Cory Shain
Many studies of human language processing have shown that readers slow down at less frequent or less predictable words, but there is debate about whether frequency and predictability effects reflect separable cognitive phenomena: are cognitive operations that retrieve words from the mental lexicon based on sensory cues distinct from those that predict upcoming words based on context? Previous evidence for a frequency-predictability dissociation is mostly based on small samples (both for estimating predictability and frequency and for testing their effects on human behavior), artificial materials (e...
2024: Open Mind: Discoveries in Cognitive Science
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38472548/does-the-processing-advantage-of-formulaic-language-persist-in-its-nonadjacent-forms-evidence-from-eye-movements-of-chinese-collocations
#57
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Shang Jiang
It has been well documented that formulaic language (such as collocations; e.g., provide information) enjoys a processing advantage over novel language (e.g., compare information). In natural language use, however, many formulaic sequences are often inserted with words intervening in between the individual constituents (e.g., provided information → provide some of the information). Whether or not the processing advantage persists in nonadjacent forms remains largely unknown. The present study thus sought to address this gap by recording the eye movements of Chinese native speakers when they were reading sentences embedded with formulaic sequences (high frequency collocations) versus novel phrases (low frequency controls), in their adjacent (e...
March 12, 2024: Journal of Psycholinguistic Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38470546/reading-comprehension-in-the-arabic-diglossia-the-svr-between-the-spoken-and-literary-varieties
#58
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Ibrahim A Asadi, Ronen Kasperski
This study aimed to examine the validity of the "simple view of reading" (SVR) model in the diglossic Arabic language. Using a longitudinal design, we tested whether decoding and listening comprehension (LC) in kindergarten can later predict reading comprehension (RC) in the first grade and whether the contribution of LC to RC differs between the spoken and literary varieties of Arabic. The participants were 261 kindergartners who were followed to the first grade. Our results from separate SEM analysis for the spoken and literary varieties revealed some similarity between the explained variance in the spoken (52%) and literary (48%) variety models...
March 12, 2024: Journal of Psycholinguistic Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38469544/studying-second-language-acquisition-in-the-age-of-large-language-models-unlocking-the-mysteries-of-language-and-learning-a-commentary-on-age-effects-in-second-language-acquisition-expanding-the-emergentist-account-by-catherine-l-caldwell-harris-and-brian-macwhinney
#59
COMMENT
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38451332/the-impact-of-efl-learners-negative-emotional-orientations-on-un-willingness-to-communicate-in-in-person-and-online-l2-learning-contexts
#60
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Mehdi Solhi
The present study explored how negative emotional orientations (i.e., anxiety, boredom, and demotivation) may contribute to English as a foreign language (EFL) learners' willingness to communicate (WTC) in in-person and online classes. In doing so, a total of 290 university students majoring in English were recruited to fill in a set of scales. The structural equation modeling analysis indicated that foreign language classroom anxiety (FLA) and L2 demotivation have a direct impact on EFL learners' in-person and online L2WTC...
March 7, 2024: Journal of Psycholinguistic Research
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