Anne White
Katholieke Universiteit Leuven
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Featured researches published by Anne White.
Psychiatry Research-neuroimaging | 2014
Anne White; Wouter Voorspoels; Gerrit Storms; Steven Verheyen
This study aims to assess the reliability and the validity of exemplar similarity derived from category fluency tasks. A homogeneous sample of 21 healthy participants completed a category fluency task twice with an interval of one week. They also rated pairs comprised of the most frequently generated exemplars in terms of similarity. Similarities were derived from the fluency data by determining the average distance between generated exemplars and correcting it for repetitions and response sequence length. We calculated the correlation between the similarities derived from the two sessions of the fluency task and between the derived similarities and the directly rated similarities. Spatial representations of the similarities were constructed using multidimensional scaling to visualize the differences between both sessions of the fluency task and the pairwise rating task. We find that the derived similarities are not stable in time and show little correspondence with directly rated similarities. The differences between similarities derived from category fluency tasks in healthy participants, indicate that similar differences between healthy controls and patients with mental disorders, do not necessarily point to a semantic impairment of the latter, but rather reflect the unreliability of the data.
Frontiers in Psychology | 2017
Anne White; Barbara C. Malt; Gert Storms
Naming patterns of bilinguals have been found to converge and form a new intermediate language system from elements of both the bilinguals’ languages. This converged naming pattern differs from the monolingual naming patterns of both a bilingual’s languages. We conducted a pre-registered replication study of experiments addressing the question whether there is a convergence between a bilingual’s both lexicons. The replication used an enlarged set of stimuli of common household containers, providing generalizability, and more reliable representations of the semantic domain. Both an analysis at the group-level and at the individual level of the correlations between naming patterns reject the two-pattern hypothesis that poses that bilinguals use two monolingual-like naming patterns, one for each of their two languages. However, the results of the original study and the replication comply with the one-pattern hypothesis, which poses that bilinguals converge the naming patterns of their two languages and form a compromise. Since this convergence is only partial the naming pattern in bilinguals corresponds to a moderate version of the one-pattern hypothesis. These findings are further confirmed by a representation of the semantic domain in a multidimensional space and the finding of shorter distances between bilingual category centers than monolingual category centers in this multidimensional space both in the original and in the replication study.
Language Learning and Development | 2016
Barbara C. Malt; Anne White; Eef Ameel; Gert Storms
ABSTRACT Much has been said about children’s strategies for mapping elements of meaning to words in toddlerhood. However, children continue to refine word meanings and patterns of word use into middle childhood and beyond, even for common words appearing in early vocabulary. We address where children past toddlerhood diverge from adults and where they more closely approximate them, and why. In two studies, we examined naming of locomotion (walking, running, hopping, etc.) by children aged four to nine and compared their patterns of word use to adult patterns. We evaluated whether the children are sensitive to the biomechanical discontinuity between pendulum-type and impact-and-recoil-type actions that constrains adult word use. We also evaluated whether they appreciate this constraint by age four or only develop appreciation later. Children from four onward were sensitive to the biomechanical distinction in their word use. Perceived domain structure plays a role in explaining later lexical development.
Journal of Memory and Language | 2018
Anne White; Gert Storms; Barbara C. Malt; Steven Verheyen
Archive | 2017
Anne White; Barbara C. Malt; Steven Verheyen; Gert Storms
International Journal of Bilingual Education and Bilingualism | 2017
Anne White; Barbara C. Malt; Steven Verheyen; Gert Storms
Cognitive Science | 2017
Anne White; Barbara C. Malt; Steven Verheyen; Gert Storms
conference cognitive science | 2016
Anne White; Gert Storms; Barbara C. Malt; Steven Verheyen
Archive | 2016
Anne White; Barbara C. Malt; Gert Storms
Archive | 2016
Anne White; Barbara C. Malt; Gert Storms