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Hemispheric differences in context sensitivity during lexical ambiguity resolution.
Brain Lang. 1998 Dec; 65(3):361-94.BL

Abstract

Three experiments were conducted to investigate the influence of contextual constraint on lexical ambiguity resolution in the cerebral hemispheres. A cross-modal priming variant of the divided visual field task was utilized in which subjects heard sentences containing homonyms and made lexical decisions to targets semantically related to dominant and subordinate meanings. Experiment 1 showed priming in both hemispheres of dominant meanings for homonyms embedded in neutral sentence contexts. Experiment 2 showed priming in both hemispheres of dominant and subordinate meanings for homonyms embedded in sentence contexts that biased a central semantic feature of the subordinate meaning. Experiment 3 showed priming of dominant meanings in the left hemisphere (LH), and priming of the subordinate meaning in the right hemisphere (RH) for homonyms embedded in sentences that biased a peripheral semantic feature of the subordinate meaning. These results are consistent with a context-sensitive model of language processing that incorporates differential sensitivity to semantic relationships in the cerebral hemispheres.

Authors+Show Affiliations

Harvard Medical School and McLean Hospital. dtitone@mclean.harvard.edu

Pub Type(s)

Comparative Study
Journal Article
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
Research Support, U.S. Gov't, P.H.S.

Language

eng

PubMed ID

9843609

Citation

Titone, D. "Hemispheric Differences in Context Sensitivity During Lexical Ambiguity Resolution." Brain and Language, vol. 65, no. 3, 1998, pp. 361-94.
Titone D. Hemispheric differences in context sensitivity during lexical ambiguity resolution. Brain Lang. 1998;65(3):361-94.
Titone, D. (1998). Hemispheric differences in context sensitivity during lexical ambiguity resolution. Brain and Language, 65(3), 361-94.
Titone D. Hemispheric Differences in Context Sensitivity During Lexical Ambiguity Resolution. Brain Lang. 1998;65(3):361-94. PubMed PMID: 9843609.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - Hemispheric differences in context sensitivity during lexical ambiguity resolution. A1 - Titone,D, PY - 1998/12/9/pubmed PY - 1998/12/9/medline PY - 1998/12/9/entrez SP - 361 EP - 94 JF - Brain and language JO - Brain Lang VL - 65 IS - 3 N2 - Three experiments were conducted to investigate the influence of contextual constraint on lexical ambiguity resolution in the cerebral hemispheres. A cross-modal priming variant of the divided visual field task was utilized in which subjects heard sentences containing homonyms and made lexical decisions to targets semantically related to dominant and subordinate meanings. Experiment 1 showed priming in both hemispheres of dominant meanings for homonyms embedded in neutral sentence contexts. Experiment 2 showed priming in both hemispheres of dominant and subordinate meanings for homonyms embedded in sentence contexts that biased a central semantic feature of the subordinate meaning. Experiment 3 showed priming of dominant meanings in the left hemisphere (LH), and priming of the subordinate meaning in the right hemisphere (RH) for homonyms embedded in sentences that biased a peripheral semantic feature of the subordinate meaning. These results are consistent with a context-sensitive model of language processing that incorporates differential sensitivity to semantic relationships in the cerebral hemispheres. SN - 0093-934X UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/9843609/Hemispheric_differences_in_context_sensitivity_during_lexical_ambiguity_resolution_ L2 - https://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S0093-934X(98)91998-8 DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -