The role of corpus size and syntax in deriving lexico-semantic representations for a wide range of concepts

Date

2015

Authors

De Deyne, S.
Verheyen, S.
Storms, G.

Editors

Advisors

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Type:

Journal article

Citation

Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology, 2015; 68(8):1643-1664

Statement of Responsibility

Simon De Deyne, Steven Verheyen, and Gert Storms

Conference Name

Abstract

One of the most significant recent advances in the study of semantic processing is the advent of models based on text and other corpora. In this study, we address what impact both the quantitative and qualitative properties of corpora have on mental representations derived from them. More precisely, we evaluate models with different linguistic and mental constraints on their ability to predict semantic relatedness between items from a vast range of domains and categories. We find that a model based on syntactic dependency relations captures significantly less of the variability for all kinds of words, regardless of the semantic relation between them or their abstractness. The largest difference was found for concrete nouns, which are commonly used to assess semantic processing. For both models we find that limited amounts of data suffice in order to obtain reliable predictions. Together, these findings suggest new constraints for the construction of mental models from corpora, both in terms of the corpus size and in terms of the linguistic properties that contribute to mental representations.

School/Discipline

Dissertation Note

Provenance

Description

Access Status

Rights

© 2015 The Experimental Psychology Society

License

Grant ID

Call number

Persistent link to this record