Pseudowords offer a unique opportunity to investigate how humans deal with new (verbal) information. Within this framework, previous studies have shown that, at the implicit level, humans exploit systematic associations in the form-meaning interface to process new information by relying on (sub-lexical) contents already mapped in semantic memory. However, whether speakers exploit such processes in explicit decisions about the meanings elicited by unfamiliar terms remains an open, important question. Here, we tested this by leveraging computational models that are able to induce semantic representations for out-of-vocabulary stimuli. Across two experiments, we demonstrate that participants' guesses about pseudoword meanings in a 2AFC task consistently align with the model's predictions. This indicates that humans' ability to extract meaningful knowledge from complex statistical patterns can affect explicit decisions.

Gatti, D., Rodio, F., Rinaldi, L., Marelli, M. (2024). On humans' (explicit) intuitions about the meaning of novel words. COGNITION, 251(October 2024) [10.1016/j.cognition.2024.105882].

On humans' (explicit) intuitions about the meaning of novel words

Rodio F.;Marelli M.
Ultimo
2024

Abstract

Pseudowords offer a unique opportunity to investigate how humans deal with new (verbal) information. Within this framework, previous studies have shown that, at the implicit level, humans exploit systematic associations in the form-meaning interface to process new information by relying on (sub-lexical) contents already mapped in semantic memory. However, whether speakers exploit such processes in explicit decisions about the meanings elicited by unfamiliar terms remains an open, important question. Here, we tested this by leveraging computational models that are able to induce semantic representations for out-of-vocabulary stimuli. Across two experiments, we demonstrate that participants' guesses about pseudoword meanings in a 2AFC task consistently align with the model's predictions. This indicates that humans' ability to extract meaningful knowledge from complex statistical patterns can affect explicit decisions.
Articolo in rivista - Articolo scientifico
Distributional semantic models; Pseudowords; Semantic memory; Statistical learning;
English
17-giu-2024
2024
251
October 2024
105882
partially_open
Gatti, D., Rodio, F., Rinaldi, L., Marelli, M. (2024). On humans' (explicit) intuitions about the meaning of novel words. COGNITION, 251(October 2024) [10.1016/j.cognition.2024.105882].
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/10281/511999
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