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A key feature of human thought and language is compositionality, the ability to bind pre-existing concepts or word meanings together in order to express new ideas. Here we ask how newly composed complex concepts are mentally represented and matched to the outside world, by testing whether it is harder to verify if a picture matches the meaning of a phrase, like big pink tree, than the meaning of a single word, like tree. Five sentence-picture verification experiments provide evidence that, in fact, the meaning of a phrase can often be checked just as fast as the meaning of one single word (and sometimes faster), indicating that the phrase's constituent concepts can be represented and checked in parallel. However, verification times were increased when matched phrases had more complex modification structures, indicating that it is costly to represent structural relations between constituent concepts. This pattern of data can be well-explained if concepts are composed together using two different mechanisms, binding by synchrony and binding by asynchrony, which have been suggested as solutions to the "binding problem" faced in both vision science and higher-level cognition. Our results suggest that they can also explain aspects of compositional language processing.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.cognition.2017.01.013 | DOI Listing |
J Speech Lang Hear Res
August 2025
Department of Communication Sciences & Disorders, Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge.
Purpose: Rhyme increases the phonological similarity of phrases individuals hear and enhances recall from working memory. This study explores whether rhyme aids word learning and examines the underlying neural mechanisms through which rhyme facilitates word learning.
Method: Fifty-seven adults completed a word learning task where they were exposed to 15 nonwords (NWs), four times each, in the sentence-final position as their electroencephalogram was recorded.
JAMIA Open
August 2025
Institute for Computer Science, Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin, Berlin 10099, Germany.
Objective: With extended life expectancy, the number of people in need of care has been growing. To optimally support them, it is important to know the patterns and conditions of their daily life that influence the need for support, and thus, the classification of the care need. In this study, we aim to utilize a large corpus consisting of care benefits applications to do an explorative analysis of factors affecting care need to support the tedious work of experts gathering reliable criteria for a care need assessment.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHum Reprod Open
July 2025
Centre for Reproductive Science, School of Environmental and Life Sciences, College of Engineering, Science and Environment, University of Newcastle, Callaghan, NSW, Australia.
Background: Male factors contribute to ∼50% of all infertility cases globally and are a major contributor to escalating use of ART. In most instances, sub-fertile men retain the ability to produce spermatozoa, albeit with reduced quality and function. By necessity, an important feature of ART is the use of technologies that bypass the natural selection barriers that prevent poor-quality spermatozoa from participating in fertilization.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Nurs Stud Adv
December 2025
College of Nursing, University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus, Aurora, 80045, USA.
Aim: The primary aim of this paper is to explore and interpret the . The secondary aim is to identify conceptual inconsistencies in the existing literature and synthesize these insights with our previous interpretations to develop a conceptual framework that clarifies the role of nursing communication, thereby providing a nursing-specific foundation for developing communication skills.
Background: The need for is widely emphasized within the discipline of nursing, and despite the widespread use of that phrase, its role in patient care and the nursing profession remains nebulous.
Top Cogn Sci
July 2025
Vivian L. Smith Department of Neurosurgery, McGovern Medical School, UTHealth Houston.
Language is perhaps the most complex and sophisticated of cognitive faculties in humans. The neurobiological basis of language in the healthy, aging brain remains a relatively neglected topic, in particular with respect to basic aspects of grammar and meaning. In the face of major changes to the physiological infrastructure underpinning perception and higher cognition, core language functions are frequently retained in the elderly.
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