Models of lexical access Flashcards
“Logogen” model (Morton)
PARALLEL ACCESS, BOTTOM-UP
- Logogens can receive inputs simultaneously from either spoken words (activating auditory analysis), written words or preceding context (activate logogens based on semantic attributes).
- Each known word is represented by a logogen so words are recognized when the activation levels exceed some threshold.
- No direct connections between logogens themselves
- Repetition priming effects: once a logogen has been activated, its threshold for activation in temporarily lowered
- Frequency effects: repeated exposure lowers the threshold
Frequency ordered bin search model (Forster)
SERIAL SEARCH, BOTTOM UP
- From auditory system
- Lexical representations are organized into bins according to word frequency
- Words are organized in the bins according to word frequency
Connectionist model Trace (McClelland and Elman)
PARALLEL AXIS: BOTTOM-UP, TOP-DOWN
- Highly interactive, can take either visual or auditory input.
Composed by multiple simple units that are connected between them and organized in 3 processing levels:
- Auditory: 1st level, analysis by phonological trait
- Phonemes: 2nd level, integrates traits
- Words: superior level, meaning
Within each level, connections are inhibitory and between levels they are excitatory
Cohort model (Marslen-Wilson)
PARALLEL AXIS: BOTTOM-UP, TOP-DOWN
Multiple cohort competitors become active immediately after the beginning of the word is detected and are gradually winnowed down to a single candidate as additional acoustic info is taken in.
- Sentence context limits initial cohort (top-down)
- Candidates are dismissed as more phonological info is taken in (bottom-up)
-Uniqueness point
-Incremental language processing: hearers begin to generate hypotheses about the meaning of the incoming speech on the basis of partial acoustic information, refining and revising these hypotheses.
Factors influencing word access and word organization
- Uniqueness point
- Frequency
- Age-of-acquisition effect: younger-processed more efficiently
- Lexicality: to say if a word or not, if a word faster than pseudoword. But if pseudoword is a possible word, takes longer
- Phonemic neighbourhood: more difficult if phonologically similar
- Context (priming): semantic, phonological, associative, of repetition or affective
- Imagineability and concreteness and abstractness: high-imaginery= concrete
- Semantics: similarity in meaning, grammatical class or completion of a pair