Title: PSY 369: Psycholinguistics
1PSY 369 Psycholinguistics
- Language Production
- Models cont.
2Dells interactive account
- Dell (1986) presented the best-known interactive
account - other similar accounts exist
- Network organization with
- 3 levels of representation
- Semantics (decomposed into features)
- Words and morphemes
- phonemes (sounds)
- These get selected and inserted into frames
3- Dell (1986)
- A moment in the production of
- Some swimmers sink
4Dell (1986)
information
5Dell (1986)
- e.g., the semantic features mammal, barks,
four-legs activate the word dog
FURRY
BARKS
MAMMAL
- this activates the sounds /d/, /o/, /g/
- these send activation back to the word level,
activating words containing these sounds (e.g.,
log, dot) to some extent
dog
log
dot
/a/
/g/
/d/
/l/
/t/
this activation is upwards (phonology to syntax)
and wouldnt occur in Levelts account
6Evidence for Dells model
- Mixed errors
- Both semantic and phonological relationship to
target word - Target cat
- semantic error dog
- phonological error hat
- mixed error rat
- Occur more often than predicted by modular models
- if you can go wrong at either stage, it would
only be by chance that an error would be mixed
7Dells explanation
- The process of making an error
- The semantic features of dog activate cat
- Some features (e.g., animate, mammalian) activate
rat as well - cat then activates the sounds /k/, /ae/, /t/
- /ae/ and /t/ activate rat by feedback
- This confluence of activation leads to increased
tendency for rat to be uttered - Also explains the tendency for phonological
errors to be real words - Sounds can only feed back to words (non-words not
represented) so only words can feedback to sound
level
8Why might interaction occur?
- Cant exist just to produce errors!
- So what is feedback for?
- Perhaps because the same network is used in
comprehension - So feedback would be the normal comprehension
route - Alternatively, it simply serves to increase
fluency in lemma selection - advantageous to select a lemma whose phonological
form is easy to find
9Evidence against interactivity
- Schriefers, Meyer, and Levelt (1990)
- DOT phonologically related
- CAT semantically related
- SHIP unrelated word
Early Only Semantic effects
Late Only Phonological effects
10Evidence against interactivity
- Schriefers, Meyer, and Levelt (1990)
- Also looked for any evidence of a mediated
priming effect
DOG (X)
CAT (X)
dog
cat
hat
/cat/
/hat/
/t/
/a/
/k/
/h/
11Evidence for interactivity
- A number of recent experimental findings appear
to support interaction under some circumstances
(or at least cascading models) - Damian Martin (1999)
- Cutting Ferreira (1999)
- Peterson Savoy (1998)
12Evidence for interactivity
- Damian and Martin (1999)
- Picture-Word interference
- The critical difference
- the addition of a semantic and phonological
condition - Picture of Apple
- peach (semantically related)
- apathy (phonologically related)
- apricot (sem phono related)
- couch (unrelated)
- (also no-word control, always fast)
peach
13Results
- early semantic inhibition
14Results
- early semantic inhibition
- late phonological facilitation (0 and 150 ms)
15Results
- early semantic inhibition
- late phonological facilitation (0 and 150 ms)
- Shows overlap, unlike Schriefers et al.
16Evidence for interactivity
- Cutting and Ferreira (1999)
- Picture-Word interference
- The critical difference
- Used homophone pictures
- Related distractors could be to the depicted
meaning or alternative meaning - game
- dance
- hammer (unrelated)
- Only tested -150 SOA
17Evidence against interactivity
- Cutting and Ferreira (1999)
BALL (X)
BALL (X)
DANCE (X)
GAME (X)
ball
ball
dance
game
/ball/
Cascading Prediction
dance
ball
/ball/
18Results
- Cutting and Ferreira (1999)
- Early semantic inhibition
19Results
- Cutting and Ferreira (1999)
- Early semantic inhibition
- Early Facilitation from a phonologically mediated
distractor
- Evidence of cascading information flow (both
semantic and phonological information at early
SOA)
20Evidence for interactivity
- Peterson Savoy
- Slightly different task
- Prepare to name the picture
- If ? comes up name it
?
21Evidence for interactivity
- Peterson Savoy
- Slightly different task
- Prepare to name the picture
- If ? comes up name it
- If a word comes up instead, name the word
liar
- Manipulate
- Word/picture relationship
- SOA
22Evidence for interactivity
- Peterson Savoy
- Used pictures with two synonymous names
Dominant
subordinate
- Used words that were phonologically related to
the non dominant name of the picture
sofa
couch
23Evidence for interactivity
- Peterson Savoy
- Found evidence for phonological activation of
near synonyms - Participants slower to say distractor soda than
unrelated distractor when naming couch - Soda is related to non-selected sofa
- Remember that Levelt et al. assume that only one
lemma can be selected and hence activate a
phonological form - Levelt et als explanation Could be erroneous
selection of two lemmas?
24Evidence for interactivity
- Summary
- These the findings appears to contradict the
discrete two-step account of Levelt et al.
25Can the two-stage account be saved?
- Evidence for interaction is hard to reconcile
with the Levelt account - However, most attempts are likely to revolve
around the monitor - Basically, people sometimes notice a problem and
screen it out - Levelt argues that evidence for interaction
really involves special cases, not directly
related to normal processing
26Overall summary
- Levelt et al.s theory of word production
- Strictly modular lexical access
- Syntactic processing precedes phonological
processing - Dells interactive account
- Interaction between syntactic and phonological
processing - Experimental evidence is equivocal, but
increasing evidence that more than one lemma may
activate associated word-form