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The elementary units of meaning

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  30 August 2019

Paul J. M. Jorion
Affiliation:
Théorie et Praxis, Maison des Sciences de l'Homme, 75270 Cedex 6, Paris, Francepaul_jorion@email.msn.comaris.ss.uci.edu/~jorion

Abstract

Examining the implications of a localist model for linguistic performance, I show the strengths of the P-graph, a network of elementary units of meaning where utterance results from relaxation through the operation of a dynamics of affect values. A unit of meaning is stored in a synaptic connection that brings together two words. Such a model, consistent with the anatomy and physiology of the neural tissue, eschews a number of traditional pitfalls of “semantic networks”: (1) ambiguity ceases to be an issue, as similar uses of a word are automatically clustered together; (2) faster retrieval of words acquired early is explained by the larger number of their instances. In addition the P-graph takes advantage of a plausible form of information storage: the local topology of the neural tissue.

Type
Brief Report
Copyright
2000 Cambridge University Press

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