4.5 Article

Semantic diversity is best measured with unscaled vectors: Reply to Cevoli, Watkins and Rastle (2020)

Journal

BEHAVIOR RESEARCH METHODS
Volume 54, Issue 4, Pages 1688-1700

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.3758/s13428-021-01693-4

Keywords

Semantic diversity; Lexical ambiguity; Polysemy

Funding

  1. Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council [BB/T004444/1]
  2. BBSRC [BB/T004444/1] Funding Source: UKRI

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The article discusses the measurement and results of semantic diversity, suggesting that using unscaled vectors can better fit human semantic judgments compared to scaled ones. The authors argue that the original semantic diversity measure should be preferred over other versions.
Semantic diversity refers to the degree of semantic variability in the contexts in which a particular word is used. We have previously proposed a method for measuring semantic diversity based on latent semantic analysis (LSA). In a recent paper, Cevoli et al. (2020) attempted to replicate our method and obtained different semantic diversity values. They suggested that this discrepancy occurred because they scaled their LSA vectors by their singular values, while we did not. Using their new results, they argued that semantic diversity is not related to ambiguity in word meaning, as we originally proposed. In this reply, we demonstrate that the use of unscaled vectors provides better fits to human semantic judgements than scaled ones. Thus we argue that our original semantic diversity measure should be preferred over the Cevoli et al. version. We replicate Cevoli et al.'s analysis using the original semantic diversity measure and find (a) our original measure is a better predictor of word recognition latencies than the Cevoli et al. equivalent and (b) that, unlike Cevoli et al.'s measure, our semantic diversity is reliably associated with a measure of polysemy based on dictionary definitions. We conclude that the Hoffman et al. semantic diversity measure is better-suited to capturing the contextual variability among words and that words appearing in a more diverse set of contexts have more variable semantic representations. However, we found that homonyms did not have higher semantic diversity values than non-homonyms, suggesting that the measure does not capture this special case of ambiguity.

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