Publications by authors named "C Westbury"

Judgments of character traits tend to be overcorrelated, a bias known as the halo effect. We conducted two studies to test an explanation of the effect based on shared lexical context and connotation. Study 1 tested whether the context similarity of trait names could explain 39 participants' ratings of the probability that two traits would co-occur.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • Osgood, Suci, and Tannebaum pioneered the study of semantics by reducing a high-dimensional model based on human judgments of word relationships, leading to the exploration of word-embedding models that analyze these relationships through patterns.
  • Hollis and Westbury identified the first eight principal components of word embeddings by correlating them with various lexical measures, revealing distinctions in the interpretation of these components.
  • A study extends this analysis by applying qualitative and quantitative methods to predict principal component values, finding that certain semantic and word class measures are effective indicators across different word-embedding datasets, supporting Wittgenstein's view on the social basis of linguistic meaning.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The use of taboo words represents one of the most common and arguably universal linguistic behaviors, fulfilling a wide range of psychological and social functions. However, in the scientific literature, taboo language is poorly characterized, and how it is realized in different languages and populations remains largely unexplored. Here we provide a database of taboo words, collected from different linguistic communities (Study 1, N = 1046), along with their speaker-centered semantic characterization (Study 2, N = 455 for each of six rating dimensions), covering 13 languages and 17 countries from all five permanently inhabited continents.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Introduction: The concept of animacy is often taken as a basic natural concept, in part I because most cases seem unambiguous. Most entities either are or are not animate. However, human animacy judgments do not reflect this binary classification.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

In recent years large datasets of lexical processing times have been released for several languages, including English, French, Spanish, and Dutch. Such datasets have enabled us to study, compare, and model the global effects of many psycholinguistic measures such as word frequency, orthographic neighborhood (ON) size, and word length. We have compiled and publicly released a frequency and ON dictionary of 64,546 words and 1800 plausible NWs from a language that has been relatively little studied by psycholinguists: Persian.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF