Core Semantic Links or Lexical Associations: Assessing the Nature of Responses in Word Association Tasks.

J Psycholinguist Res

Psychology Faculty, Institute of Basic and Applied Psychology and Technology, National University of Mar del Plata, Funes 3250, Building V, Level III, Mar del Plata, Buenos Aires, Argentina.

Published: February 2019

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Article Abstract

The processes tapped by the widely-used word association (WA) paradigm remain a matter of debate: while some authors consider them as driven by lexical co-occurrences, others emphasize the role of meaning-based connections. To test these contrastive hypotheses, we analyzed responses in a WA task in terms of their normative defining features (those describing the object denoted by the cue word). Results indicate that 72.5% of the responses had medium-to-high coincidence with such defining semantic features. Moreover, 75.51% of responses had medium-to-high values of Relevance (a measure of the importance of the feature for construing a given concept). Furthermore, most responses (62.7%) referred to elements of the situation in which the concept usually appears, followed by sensory properties (e.g., color) of the denoted object (27.86%). These results suggest that the processes behind WA tasks involve a reactivation of the cue item's semantic properties, particularly those most relevant to its core meaning.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10936-018-9601-8DOI Listing

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