Article de revue: ID no. (ISBN etc.):  0898929X Clé de citation BibTeX:  Pylkkanen2006
Pylkkänen, L., Llinás, R., & Murphy, G. L. (2006). The representation of polysemy: Meg evidence. Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience, 18(1), p. p97–109.
Ajoutée par: Lynda Taabane 2008-02-07 17:18:41
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Catégories: concept, Full text, Polysémie
Descripteurs: BRAIN -- Magnetic fields -- Measurement, COGNITION, MAGNETOENCEPHALOGRAPHY, polysemy, Semantics, SENSES & sensation
Auteurs: Llinás, Murphy, Pylkkänen
Collection: Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience

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Résumé
Most words in natural language are polysemous, that is, they can be used in more than one way. For example, paper can be used to refer to a substance made out of wood pulp or to a daily publication printed on that substance. Although virtually every sentence contains polysemy, there is little agreement as to how polysemy is represented in the mental lexicon. Do different uses of polysemous words involve access to a single representation or do our minds store distinct representations for each different sense? Here we investigated priming between senses with a combination of behavioral and magnetoencephalographic measures in order to test whether different senses of the same word involve identity or mere formal and semantic similarity. Our results show that polysemy effects are clearly distinct from similarity effects bilaterally. In the left hemisphere, sense-relatedness elicited shorter latencies of the M350 source, which has been hypothesized to index lexical activation. Concurrent a
Ajoutée par: Lynda Taabane

 
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Ajoutée par: Lynda Taabane
 

 
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