نتایج جستجو برای: abstract words

تعداد نتایج: 527282  

2011
Anna M. Borghi Andrea Flumini Felice Cimatti Davide Marocco Claudia Scorolli

Four experiments (E1-E2-E3-E4) investigated whether different acquisition modalities lead to the emergence of differences typically found between concrete and abstract words, as argued by the words as tools (WAT) proposal. To mimic the acquisition of concrete and abstract concepts, participants either manipulated novel objects or observed groups of objects interacting in novel ways (Training 1)...

2016
Anna M. Borghi Edoardo Zarcone

One key issue for theories of cognition is how abstract concepts, such as freedom, are represented. According to the WAT (Words As social Tools) proposal, abstract concepts activate both sensorimotor and linguistic/social information, and their acquisition modality involves the linguistic experience more than the acquisition of concrete concepts. We report an experiment in which participants we...

Journal: :Cognition 2013
Elika Bergelson Daniel Swingley

Young infants' learning of words for abstract concepts like 'all gone' and 'eat,' in contrast to their learning of more concrete words like 'apple' and 'shoe,' may follow a relatively protracted developmental course. We examined whether infants know such abstract words. Parents named one of two events shown in side-by-side videos while their 6-16-month-old infants (n=98) watched. On average, in...

Journal: :Cortex; a journal devoted to the study of the nervous system and behavior 2012
Mikael Roll Frida Mårtensson Sverker Sikström Pia Apt Rasmus Arnling-Bååth Merle Horne

INTRODUCTION Left frontal brain lesions are known to give rise to aphasia and impaired word associations. These associations have previously been difficult to analyze. We used a semantic space method to investigate associations to cue words. The degree of abstractness of the generated words and semantic similarity to the cue words were measured. METHOD Three subjects diagnosed with Broca's ap...

Journal: :Neuropsychology 2009
Elizabeth Jefferies Karalyn Patterson Roy W Jones Matthew A Lambon Ralph

The vast majority of brain-injured patients with semantic impairment have better comprehension of concrete than abstract words. In contrast, several patients with semantic dementia (SD), who show circumscribed atrophy of the anterior temporal lobes bilaterally, have been reported to show reverse imageability effects, that is, relative preservation of abstract knowledge. Although these reports l...

2007
Justin Palumbo

The notion of an unavoidable set of words appears frequently in the fields of mathematics and theoretical computer science, in particular with its connection to the study of combinatorics on words. The theory of unavoidable sets has seen extensive study over the past twenty years. In this paper we extend the definition of unavoidable sets of words to unavoidable sets of partial words. Partial w...

2013
Tim Shallice Richard P. Cooper

Two views on the semantics of concrete words are that their core mental representations are feature-based or are reconstructions of sensory experience. We argue that neither of these approaches is capable of representing the semantics of abstract words, which involve the representation of possibly hypothetical physical and mental states, the binding of entities within a structure, and the possi...

2007
Richard Tzong-Han Tsai Hsieh-Chuan Hung Hong-Jie Dai Jaimie Yi-Wen Lin

Background

Journal: :Psychophysiology 2016
Paweł Stróżak Christopher W Bird Krystin Corby Gwen Frishkoff Tim Curran

According to dual-process models, recognition memory depends on two neurocognitive mechanisms: familiarity, which has been linked to the frontal N400 (FN400) effect in studies using ERPs, and recollection, which is reflected by changes in the late positive complex (LPC). Recently, there has been some debate over the relationship between FN400 familiarity effects and N400 semantic effects. Accor...

Journal: :Journal of cognitive neuroscience 2009
Anna Mestres-Missé Thomas F. Münte Antoni Rodríguez-Fornells

The meaning of a novel word can be acquired by extracting it from linguistic context. Here we simulated word learning of new words associated to concrete and abstract concepts in a variant of the human simulation paradigm that provided linguistic context information in order to characterize the brain systems involved. Native speakers of Spanish read pairs of sentences in order to derive the mea...

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