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The absoluteness of semantic processing: lessons from the analysis of temporal clusters in phonemic verbal fluency.


ABSTRACT:

Background

For word production, we may consciously pursue semantic or phonological search strategies, but it is uncertain whether we can retrieve the different aspects of lexical information independently from each other. We therefore studied the spread of semantic information into words produced under exclusively phonemic task demands.

Methods

42 subjects participated in a letter verbal fluency task, demanding the production of as many s-words as possible in two minutes. Based on curve fittings for the time courses of word production, output spurts (temporal clusters) considered to reflect rapid lexical retrieval based on automatic activation spread, were identified. Semantic and phonemic word relatedness within versus between these clusters was assessed by respective scores (0 meaning no relation, 4 maximum relation).

Results

Subjects produced 27.5 (±9.4) words belonging to 6.7 (±2.4) clusters. Both phonemically and semantically words were more related within clusters than between clusters (phon: 0.33±0.22 vs. 0.19±0.17, p<.01; sem: 0.65±0.29 vs. 0.37±0.29, p<.01). Whereas the extent of phonemic relatedness correlated with high task performance, the contrary was the case for the extent of semantic relatedness.

Conclusion

The results indicate that semantic information spread occurs, even if the consciously pursued word search strategy is purely phonological. This, together with the negative correlation between semantic relatedness and verbal output suits the idea of a semantic default mode of lexical search, acting against rapid task performance in the given scenario of phonemic verbal fluency. The simultaneity of enhanced semantic and phonemic word relatedness within the same temporal cluster boundaries suggests an interaction between content and sound-related information whenever a new semantic field has been opened.

SUBMITTER: Vonberg I 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC4275266 | biostudies-literature | 2014

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Publications

The absoluteness of semantic processing: lessons from the analysis of temporal clusters in phonemic verbal fluency.

Vonberg Isabelle I   Ehlen Felicitas F   Fromm Ortwin O   Klostermann Fabian F  

PloS one 20141223 12


<h4>Background</h4>For word production, we may consciously pursue semantic or phonological search strategies, but it is uncertain whether we can retrieve the different aspects of lexical information independently from each other. We therefore studied the spread of semantic information into words produced under exclusively phonemic task demands.<h4>Methods</h4>42 subjects participated in a letter verbal fluency task, demanding the production of as many s-words as possible in two minutes. Based on  ...[more]

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