Department of Psychology, Monash University, 3168, Clayton, Victoria, Australia.
Mem Cognit. 1976 Jan;4(1):53-61. doi: 10.3758/BF03213255.
Two experiments which test predictions derived from the assumption that lexical access involves a search process are reported. In the first experiment, test items must be classified as ambiguous or unambiguous, and in the second experiment, they are classified according to their syntactic properties. In both experiments, it is shown that when the target of the search is a nonexistent entry, an exhaustive search is involved, even though the test items are words. Further, in these conditions, frequency of occurrence is no longer related to decision time, as it is in lexical decision experiments. It is concluded that the search model adequately explains the procedure whereby the most common meaning of a homograph is accessed, but that the less common meaning is accessed in some completely different manner.
报告了两项实验,这些实验测试了基于词汇访问涉及搜索过程的假设的预测。在第一个实验中,测试项必须分类为歧义或非歧义,在第二个实验中,它们根据其句法属性进行分类。在这两个实验中,都表明当搜索的目标是不存在的条目时,即使测试项是单词,也会涉及到穷尽搜索。此外,在这些条件下,频率不再像在词汇判断实验中那样与决策时间相关。结论是,搜索模型充分解释了获取同形异义词最常见含义的过程,但获取不太常见含义的方式则完全不同。