Timed picture naming in seven languages
Autor: | Angela Tzeng, Thomas Pechmann, Katherine Kohnert, Csaba Pléh, Elizabeth Bates, Kara D. Federmeier, Ovid J.L. Tzeng, Elena Andonova, Jeanne Hsu, Antonella Devescovi, Daisy L. Hung, Ching Ching Lu, Gowri K. Iyer, Nicole Y.Y. Wicha, Irini Gerdjikova, Gabriel Gutierrez, Thomas Jacobsen, Dan Herron, Simona D'Amico, Araceli Orozco-Figueroa, Anna Szekely, Teodora H. Mehotcheva |
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Rok vydání: | 2003 |
Předmět: |
Cross-Cultural Comparison
Vocabulary lexical access media_common.quotation_subject Experimental and Cognitive Psychology Article Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) croSS LINGUISTIC Phonetics Developmental and Educational Psychology Reaction Time Humans media_common Language Linguistics Problem of universals Agreement Word lists by frequency Visual Perception Depiction Affect (linguistics) Syllable Psychology |
Zdroj: | Scopus-Elsevier |
ISSN: | 1069-9384 |
Popis: | Timed picture naming was compared in seven languages that vary along dimensions known to affect lexical access. Analyses over items focused on factors that determine cross-language universals and cross-language disparities. With regard to universals, number of alternative names had large effects on reaction time within and across languages after target-name agreement was controlled, suggesting inhibitory effects from lexical competitors. For all the languages, word frequency and goodness of depiction had large effects, but objective picture complexity did not. Effects of word structure variables (length, syllable structure, compounding, and initial frication) varied markedly over languages. Strong cross-language correlations were found in naming latencies, frequency, and length. Other-language frequency effects were observed (e.g., Chinese frequencies predicting Spanish reaction times) even after within-language effects were controlled (e.g., Spanish frequencies predicting Spanish reaction times). These surprising cross-language correlations challenge widely held assumptions about the lexical locus of length and frequency effects, suggesting instead that they may (at least in part) reflect familiarity and accessibility at a conceptual level that is shared over languages. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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