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                                       Details for article 92 of 105 found articles
 
 
  The relationship between word meanings in the first and second language: Evidence for a common, but restricted, semantic code
 
 
Title: The relationship between word meanings in the first and second language: Evidence for a common, but restricted, semantic code
Author: Williams, John N.
Appeared in: European journal of cognitive psychology
Paging: Volume 6 (1994) nr. 2 pages 195-220
Year: 1994-06-01
Contents: A number of cross-language priming experiments are reported that evaluate whether word meanings in the first and second language are represented in common or separate systems. A masked priming procedure was used on the assumption that when prime awareness is limited, any priming effects directly reveal the underlying structure of the semantic system. Primes were presented in the subjects' first language, while targets were in their second language. Priming effects were obtained for word pairs that were semantically highly similar but not translation equivalents, for example fence-haie (= hedge in French), suggesting that words in the two languages share common elements of semantic code. Priming was also obtained between translation equivalents which, in conjunction with the results for semantically similar pairs, is most naturally interpreted in terms of partially shared semantic representations. However, no masked priming effects were obtained between associated pairs of relatively low semantic similarity, for example shoe-pied (= foot in French), whereas such pairs did produce an effect when primes were unmasked. The results are discussed in terms of limitations on the semantic activation produced by masked words, and the role of collocational relationships in priming between associated words in the same language.
Publisher: Psychology Press
Source file: Elektronische Wetenschappelijke Tijdschriften
 
 

                             Details for article 92 of 105 found articles
 
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