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RESEARCH PRODUCT
“It is alive!” Evidence for animacy effects in semantic categorization and lexical decision
Alain MéotMargaux GelinPatrick BoninVivien Diouxsubject
Linguistics and Languagemedia_common.quotation_subject05 social sciencesExperimental and Cognitive PsychologyContext (language use)[SCCO.LING]Cognitive science/Linguistics050105 experimental psychologyLanguage and Linguistics03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineCategorizationSalientPerception[SCCO.PSYC]Cognitive science/PsychologyLexical decision taskSemantic memory0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesAnimacyPsychologyEpisodic memory030217 neurology & neurosurgeryGeneral PsychologyCognitive psychologymedia_commondescription
AbstractAnimacy is one of the basic semantic features of word meaning and influences perceptual and episodic memory processes. However, evidence that this variable also influences lexicosemantic processing is mixed. As animacy is a semantic variable thought to have evolutionary roots, we first examined its influence in a semantic categorization task that did not make the animacy dimension salient, namely, concrete-abstract categorization. Animates were categorized faster (and more accurately) than inanimates. We then assessed the influence of animacy in two lexical decision experiments. In Experiment 2, we mostly used legal nonwords, whereas in Experiment 3, we varied the context of the nonwords across participants in such a way that the discriminability between words and nonwords was either high or low. Animates yielded faster decision times than inanimates when legal nonwords were used (Experiment 2) and when the discriminability between words and nonwords was low (i.e., “difficult nonwords” in Experiment 3), but the difference between the two types of words was not reliable when discriminability was high (e.g., illegal strings of letters, i.e., “easy nonwords” in Experiment 3). The findings suggest that animacy is a core meaning-related dimension that influences a large number of processes involved in perception, episodic memory, and semantic memory.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2019-07-01 |