Publication Date:
2016
abstract:
This special issue, together with its companion issue to appear in Italian Journal
of Linguistics, stems from the NetWordS Final Conference "Word
knowledge and word usage: representations and processes in the mental lexicon".
The conference, held on the 30th and 31st of March, and the 1st of April
2015 in Pisa, concluded the 4-year NetWordS project, the European Network
of Word Structure funded by the European Science Foundation within the Research
Networking Programme. In line with the highly multidisciplinary profile
of NetWordS agenda, the conference offered a comprehensive and inclusive
forum focussing on two main lines of lexical inquiry:
(i) usage-based approaches to bootstrapping word form and structure
(morpho-phonological and morpho-syntactic issues), including: acquisition of
lexical categories, emergence of morphological structure, lexical memories,
anticipatory prediction-based mechanisms of word recognition, word production,
frequency-based models of lexical productivity, word encoding, models
of lexical architecture, family-based effects in word processing, word reading
and writing;
(ii) usage-based approaches to word meanings (lexical semantics and
pragmatics in morphologically simple and complex words), including: distributional
semantics, compound interpretation, concept composition and coercion,
conceptualization of perception and action, time and space in the lexicon,
metonymy and metaphor, lexico-semantic relations, perceptual grounding
and embodied cognition, context-based and encyclopedic knowledge, semantic
association and categorization.
The multidisciplinary focus on word knowledge and word usage promoted
by the Conference led participants to openly discuss an impressive range of
approaches and empirical data: priming and lexical decision in a number of
contexts, distributional semantics and models of semantic composition, neural
networks, machine learning and mathematical modelling of empirical evidence,
as well as their neuro-biological and neuro-functional correlates.
It is widely acknowledged that looking at the same problem from different
angles has an additive effect on the impact of current language research. Certainly more can be achieved, however, if, rather than simply adding more perspectives
on the same subject, with individual research efforts staying within
the boundaries of single knowledge domains, scholars manage to integrate
them into a boundary-shifting methodological perspective. When psycholinguistic
evidence from humans is successfully replicated algorithmically
through a computational model implementing a few well-understood principles
of time-series processing, we are in a position to empirically assess what
input conditions favour memorisation and acquisition of symbolic strings by
the model, and test these algorithmic predictions back on human subjects, thus
going full circle. This may have a multiplicative effect on current research,
providing not only mathematical modelling of present behavioural evidence,
but amounting to fully explanatory mechanisms. Our current understanding of
WHERE and WHEN some cognitive processes are implemented in the brain will
be complemented by knowledge of WHAT information they rely on and HOW
they integrate it.
Other compelling examples of the full potential of cross-disciplinary integration
can be found in the present volume and in the twin issue of Italian
Journal of Linguistics. As a general point, we contend that only by putting
single-domain acquisitions into the wider context of human communication,
and developing an interdisciplinary framework whereby each specialist will
take advantage of insights from other disciplines, we can make substantial
progress in our understanding of the lexical roots of human verbal communication
in real contexts.
Iris type:
01.10 Curatela di numero monografico in rivista
Keywords:
word knowledge; word usage; interdisciplinary approach; mental lexicon; NetWordS
List of contributors:
Pirrelli, Vito; Marzi, Claudia
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