CLNCJul 1, 2022

How trial-to-trial learning shapes mappings in the mental lexicon: Modelling Lexical Decision with Linear Discriminative Learning

arXiv:2207.00430v321 citationsh-index: 59
Originality Synthesis-oriented
AI Analysis

This provides incremental evidence for cognitive scientists studying lexical processing and individual differences in mental lexicon dynamics.

The study investigated whether trial-to-trial learning occurs in unprimed lexical decision experiments by simulating the British Lexicon Project data with the Discriminative Lexicon Model and comparing learning-based vs. non-learning models using Generalised Additive Models. Learning-based models showed better fit for most subjects, supporting the detection of trial-to-trial learning and suggesting continuous changes in lexical knowledge.

Trial-to-trial effects have been found in a number of studies, indicating that processing a stimulus influences responses in subsequent trials. A special case are priming effects which have been modelled successfully with error-driven learning (Marsolek, 2008), implying that participants are continuously learning during experiments. This study investigates whether trial-to-trial learning can be detected in an unprimed lexical decision experiment. We used the Discriminative Lexicon Model (DLM; Baayen et al., 2019), a model of the mental lexicon with meaning representations from distributional semantics, which models error-driven incremental learning with the Widrow-Hoff rule. We used data from the British Lexicon Project (BLP; Keuleers et al., 2012) and simulated the lexical decision experiment with the DLM on a trial-by-trial basis for each subject individually. Then, reaction times were predicted with Generalised Additive Models (GAMs), using measures derived from the DLM simulations as predictors. We extracted measures from two simulations per subject (one with learning updates between trials and one without), and used them as input to two GAMs. Learning-based models showed better model fit than the non-learning ones for the majority of subjects. Our measures also provide insights into lexical processing and individual differences. This demonstrates the potential of the DLM to model behavioural data and leads to the conclusion that trial-to-trial learning can indeed be detected in unprimed lexical decision. Our results support the possibility that our lexical knowledge is subject to continuous changes.

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