4.5 Article

Are there mental lexicons? The role of semantics in lexical decision

Journal

BRAIN RESEARCH
Volume 1365, Issue -, Pages 66-81

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/j.brainres.2010.09.057

Keywords

Semantics; Lexicon; Lexical decision; Word reading; Computational modeling; Semantic dementia

Categories

Funding

  1. NIMH NIH HHS [P50 MH064445, P01-MH64445, P50 MH064445-010001] Funding Source: Medline

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What is the underlying representation of lexical knowledge? How do we know whether a given string of letters is a word, whereas another string of letters is not? There are two competing models of lexical processing in the literature. The first proposes that we rely on mental lexicons. The second claims there are no mental lexicons; we identify certain items as words based on semantic knowledge. Thus, the former approach - the multiple-systems view-posits that lexical and semantic processing are subserved by separate systems, whereas the latter approach - the single-system view - holds that the two are interdependent. Semantic dementia patients, who have a cross-modal semantic impairment, show an accompanying and related lexical deficit. These findings support the single-system approach. However, a report of an SD patient whose impairment on lexical decision was not related to his semantic deficits in item-specific ways has presented a challenge to this view. If the two types of processing rely on a common system, then shouldn't damage impair the same items on all tasks? We present a single-system model of lexical and semantic processing, where there are no lexicons, and performance on lexical decision involves the activation of semantic representations. We show how, when these representations are damaged, accuracy on semantic and lexical tasks falls off together, but not necessarily on the same set of items. These findings are congruent with the patient data. We provide an explicit explanation of this pattern of results in our model, by defining and measuring the effects of two orthogonal factors spelling consistency and concept consistency. (C) 2010 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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