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Idiosyncratic Tower of Babel: Individual Differences in Word-Meaning Representation Increase as Word Abstractness Increases

Xiaosha Wang, Yanchao Bi

2021Psychological Science44 citationsDOI

Abstract

Humans primarily rely on language to communicate, on the basis of a shared understanding of the basic building blocks of communication: words. Do we mean the same things when we use the same words? Although cognitive neural research on semantics has revealed the common principles of word-meaning representation, the factors underlying the potential individual variations in word meanings are unknown. Here, we empirically characterized the intersubject consistency of 90 words across 20 adult subjects (10 female) using both behavioral measures (rating-based semantic-relationship patterns) and neuroimaging measures (word-evoked brain activity patterns). Across both the behavioral and neuroimaging experiments, we showed that the magnitude of individual disagreements on word meanings could be modeled on the basis of how much language or sensory experience is associated with a word and that this variation increases with word abstractness. Uncovering the cognitive and neural origins of word-meaning disagreements across individuals has implications for potential mechanisms to modulate such disagreements.

Topics & Concepts

PsychologyMeaning (existential)CognitionSemantics (computer science)NeuroimagingWord (group theory)Cognitive psychologyVariation (astronomy)LinguisticsRepresentation (politics)Word lists by frequencyNeuroscienceComputer scienceSentenceProgramming languagePhilosophyLawPolitical sciencePsychotherapistPoliticsPhysicsAstrophysicsNeurobiology of Language and BilingualismNeural and Behavioral Psychology StudiesAction Observation and Synchronization