Please join
us for a colloquium presented by the SPHS PhD Organization and the
Department of Speech & Hearing Sciences!
The
‘Other’ Dimension of Words
by Mike
Jones, Ph.D.
Assistant
Professor
Indiana
University
Dept of Psychological and Brain Sciences,
Dept of Psychological and Brain Sciences,
Cognitive
Science Program, &
School of
Informatics
Location: Speech and Hearing Building,
Room C141
Time: Friday, April 12, 11 am - noon
ABSTRACT
Meaning is simultaneously the most obvious
feature of language (we can all compute it rapidly and automatically), and the
most mysterious aspect to study. In comparison to many areas of cognition,
relatively little is known about how the mind computes meaning from experience.
We can reasonably measure and model the characteristics of words based on their
physical properties, such as frequency, orthography, phonology, etc. But
lexical semantics is often seen as a mysterious ‘other’ dimension and is
approximated with subjective ratings, hand-coded norms, or surface-level count
algorithms. In this talk, I plan to do a tutorial on some recent advances in
cognitive and statistical models of lexical semantic representation. These
models attempt to learn rich semantic representations for words from
statistical redundancies in text corpora. Time permitting, I will also cover
some recent work on integrating perceptual and linguistic information in
semantic models, compositional semantics, and some work from my lab applying
the models to better understand cognitive processing in linguistic tasks from clinical
populations.
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