It’s a very satisfying thing to learn that there’s a word for an experience you didn’t know could be described by a word. Learning that, for example, clinomania is an “excessive desire to stay in bed” ...
Half of a word's meaning is simply a three dimensional summary of the rewards associated with it, according to an analysis of millions of blog entries undertaken by researchers. We make choices about ...
It is now possible to identify the meaning of words with multiple meanings, without using their semantic context. Two physicists have now devised a method to automatically elucidate the meaning of ...
The film explores the complexities of meaning in language, highlighting three types: denotative meaning (the literal reference of a word), conceptual meaning (the ideas associated with a word), and ...
The brain glitch can help us understand how we perceive the world. While this may have felt like a sort of cognitive processing glitch, some scientists, such as cognitive neuroscientist David Huber ...
This talk by Elisabetta Ježek presents linguistic evidence why we need a context-sensitive model of lexical semantics to account for how lexical information, cognitive knowledge, pragmatic inference ...
Brain power: Can a duck have four legs? This was the question addressed by Prof Matthew Lambon Ralph in his BA Darwin Award lecture at the Festival of Science in Norwich yesterday. Prof Lambon Ralph ...