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Original Articles

Multiple meanings are not necessarily a disadvantage in semantic processing: Evidence from homophone effects in semantic categorisation

, , &
Pages 453-467 | Received 01 Dec 2005, Published online: 08 Jan 2008
 

Abstract

The ambiguity disadvantage (slower processing of ambiguous words relative to unambiguous words) has been taken as evidence for a distributed semantic representational system like that embodied in parallel distributed processing (PDP) models. In the present study, we investigated whether semantic ambiguity slows meaning activation, as PDP models would predict, by examining homophone effects in semantic categorisation tasks. We observed a homophone effect in a go/no-go semantic categorisation task, but not in a yes/no semantic categorisation task. Our results suggest that previously reported ambiguity effects may have been due to the decision phase of the semantic categorisation task and not to the semantic processing phase, in which case the interpretation of the ambiguity disadvantage will need to be reconsidered.

This research was supported by Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC) discovery grants to P.D.S., P.M.P., and C.R.S. We thank two anonymous reviewers for helpful comments on earlier versions of this manuscript.

Notes

1We thank an anonymous reviewer for this suggestion.

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