22 - Word Meaning 2 Flashcards
What are limitations with learning referentially?
We cannot learn abstract concepts (like ‘mind’ ‘thoughts’) and words can mean different things
What is Chompsky’s (1980) “Poverty of the Stimulus”?
We acquire the majority of words we learn indirectly
We learn words before we know EXACTLY what they mean (we vaguely know)
There must be something innate in word learning
We take more meaning from a sentence than what is contained in a sentence
12-year-olds learn 10-15 words per day, <1 of these through direct conversation
(most through reading)
This would require reading approx. 20 paragraphs per day, but the average amount for this age is 5
This is the problem of induction
We not only understand the meaning of words, we understand the ________ ________ _____
Relationship between them
E.g. dog refers to the object dog, but also other things
What are the 4 concept relations that all contribute to our understanding of a word?
Word-concept relation
Concept-concept relation
Concept-perception relation
Word-word relation
Are the 4 concept relations independent of one another or are all relevant?
All are relevant to understanding a word
What is a word-concept relation?
What concept does the word relate to
E.g. dog = animal
What is a concept-concept relation
What are the other features of the concept
E.g. dog = barks and has a tail
What is a concept-perception relation?
What are our perceptions of a dog and what makes up our schema of a dog
E.g. dog = we know what dog’s look like and they sniff other dog’s bums
What is a word-word relation?
Words that are associated with the word
E.g. dog is associated with bone, opposite to cat
When do we begin to be able to understand words at a more conceptual level?
Around 7 years of age
Children under 7 show “syntagmatic responding” with word associations. What does this mean?
Completing a sentence
E.g. if you said “cold” they might say “outside”
Children over the age of 7 show “paradigmatic responding” with word association. What does this mean?
Creating an association with a relating word
E.g. “Cold” is associated with “hot”
What are the two views regarding why children begin to show paradigmatic responding at age 7?
Maturation effect: as children get older their brains develop to make these shifts
First to second-order associative learning (statistical learning): we track the distribution of the co-occurrence of words. Based on this idea children are learning to read and therefore begin to connect these words together.
This might explain the poverty of the stimulus and induction
Adults who are learning a second language go from syntagmatic to paradigmatic responses the better they get at learning a language. What view explains why this happens better?
First to second-order associative learning
What is first to second-order associative learning?
Word meaning can be derived from the statistical pattern derived from the context of which it occurs.
- Quotes:*
- “You shall know a word by the company it keeps”*
- Firth (1957)*
- “If words A and B have almost identical environments, they have similar*
- Meaning”*
- Harris(1954)*
- “Verbal meaning = activation of the relations between words”*
- Landauer (2007)*
Describe the “distributional theories of word meaning”
We use statistical learning to track how words co-occur together
Distributed linguistic representations: the meaning of a word is dependent on the distribution with which it occurs with other words
Frequency of co-occurrences is not enough, co-occurrence distributions determine word meaning as similarity abstracted over context
This has been tested through computational models that tracks word co-occurrences on a large scale
How have distributional theories of word meaning been tested?
Computational models call “latent semantic analysis” (LSA)