Adults' Acquisition of Novel Dimension Words: Creating a Semantic Congruity Effect |
| |
Authors: | Brigette Oliver Ryalls Linda B. Smith |
| |
Affiliation: | 1. Department of Psychology , University of Nebraska , Omaha;2. Department of Psychology , Indiana University |
| |
Abstract: | The semantic congruity effect is exhibited when adults are asked to compare pairs of items from a series, and their response is faster when the direction of the comparison coincides with the location of the stimuli in the series. For example, people are faster at picking the bigger of 2 big items than the littler of 2 big items. In the 4 experiments presented, adults were taught new dimensional adjectives (mal/ler and borg/er). Characteristics of the learning situation, such as the nature of the stimulus series and the relative frequency of labeling, were varied. Results revealed that the participants who learned the relative meaning of the artificial dimensional adjectives also formed categories and developed a semantic congruity effect regardless of the characteristics of training. These findings have important implications for our understanding of adult acquisition of novel relational words, the relationship between learning such words and categorization, and the explanations of the semantic congruity effect. |
| |
Keywords: | cognitive abilities elementary cognitive tasks reaction time speed of processing |
|
|