Fine-grained semantic categorization across the abstract and concrete domains.

A consolidated approach to the study of the mental representation of word meanings has consisted in contrasting different domains of knowledge, broadly reflecting the abstract-concrete dichotomy. More fine-grained semantic distinctions have emerged in neuropsychological and cognitive neuroscience wo...

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Main Authors: Marta Ghio, Matilde Maria Serena Vaghi, Marco Tettamanti
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2013-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3692433?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-1393af1548fa4715b61300a22e3d22722020-11-24T21:12:24ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032013-01-0186e6709010.1371/journal.pone.0067090Fine-grained semantic categorization across the abstract and concrete domains.Marta GhioMatilde Maria Serena VaghiMarco TettamantiA consolidated approach to the study of the mental representation of word meanings has consisted in contrasting different domains of knowledge, broadly reflecting the abstract-concrete dichotomy. More fine-grained semantic distinctions have emerged in neuropsychological and cognitive neuroscience work, reflecting semantic category specificity, but almost exclusively within the concrete domain. Theoretical advances, particularly within the area of embodied cognition, have more recently put forward the idea that distributed neural representations tied to the kinds of experience maintained with the concepts' referents might distinguish conceptual meanings with a high degree of specificity, including those within the abstract domain. Here we report the results of two psycholinguistic rating studies incorporating such theoretical advances with two main objectives: first, to provide empirical evidence of fine-grained distinctions within both the abstract and the concrete semantic domains with respect to relevant psycholinguistic dimensions; second, to develop a carefully controlled linguistic stimulus set that may be used for auditory as well as visual neuroimaging studies focusing on the parametrization of the semantic space beyond the abstract-concrete dichotomy. Ninety-six participants rated a set of 210 sentences across pre-selected concrete (mouth, hand, or leg action-related) and abstract (mental state-, emotion-, mathematics-related) categories, with respect either to different semantic domain-related scales (rating study 1), or to concreteness, familiarity, and context availability (rating study 2). Inferential statistics and correspondence analyses highlighted distinguishing semantic and psycholinguistic traits for each of the pre-selected categories, indicating that a simple abstract-concrete dichotomy is not sufficient to account for the entire semantic variability within either domains.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3692433?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Marta Ghio
Matilde Maria Serena Vaghi
Marco Tettamanti
spellingShingle Marta Ghio
Matilde Maria Serena Vaghi
Marco Tettamanti
Fine-grained semantic categorization across the abstract and concrete domains.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Marta Ghio
Matilde Maria Serena Vaghi
Marco Tettamanti
author_sort Marta Ghio
title Fine-grained semantic categorization across the abstract and concrete domains.
title_short Fine-grained semantic categorization across the abstract and concrete domains.
title_full Fine-grained semantic categorization across the abstract and concrete domains.
title_fullStr Fine-grained semantic categorization across the abstract and concrete domains.
title_full_unstemmed Fine-grained semantic categorization across the abstract and concrete domains.
title_sort fine-grained semantic categorization across the abstract and concrete domains.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2013-01-01
description A consolidated approach to the study of the mental representation of word meanings has consisted in contrasting different domains of knowledge, broadly reflecting the abstract-concrete dichotomy. More fine-grained semantic distinctions have emerged in neuropsychological and cognitive neuroscience work, reflecting semantic category specificity, but almost exclusively within the concrete domain. Theoretical advances, particularly within the area of embodied cognition, have more recently put forward the idea that distributed neural representations tied to the kinds of experience maintained with the concepts' referents might distinguish conceptual meanings with a high degree of specificity, including those within the abstract domain. Here we report the results of two psycholinguistic rating studies incorporating such theoretical advances with two main objectives: first, to provide empirical evidence of fine-grained distinctions within both the abstract and the concrete semantic domains with respect to relevant psycholinguistic dimensions; second, to develop a carefully controlled linguistic stimulus set that may be used for auditory as well as visual neuroimaging studies focusing on the parametrization of the semantic space beyond the abstract-concrete dichotomy. Ninety-six participants rated a set of 210 sentences across pre-selected concrete (mouth, hand, or leg action-related) and abstract (mental state-, emotion-, mathematics-related) categories, with respect either to different semantic domain-related scales (rating study 1), or to concreteness, familiarity, and context availability (rating study 2). Inferential statistics and correspondence analyses highlighted distinguishing semantic and psycholinguistic traits for each of the pre-selected categories, indicating that a simple abstract-concrete dichotomy is not sufficient to account for the entire semantic variability within either domains.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3692433?pdf=render
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