What we mean when we say semantic: Toward a multidisciplinary semantic glossary.
Jamie J ReillyCory ShainValentina BorghesaniPhilipp KuhnkeGabriella ViglioccoJonathan E PeelleBradford Z MahonLaurel J BuxbaumAsifa MajidMarc BrysbaertAnna M BorghiSimon De DeyneGuy DoveLiuba PapeoPenny M PexmanDavid PoeppelGary LupyanPaulo BoggioGregory HickokLaura GwilliamsLeonardo FernandinoDaniel MirmanEvangelia G ChrysikouChaleece W SandbergSebastian J CrutchLiina PylkkänenEiling YeeRebecca L JacksonJennifer M RoddMarina BednyLouise ConnellMarkus KieferDavid KemmererGreig de ZubicarayElizabeth JefferiesDermot LynottCynthia S Q SiewRutvik H DesaiKen McRaeMichele T DiazMarianna BolognesiEvelina FedorenkoSwathi KiranMaria MontefineseJeffrey R BinderMelvin J YapGesa HartwigsenJessica CantlonYanchao BiPaul HoffmanFrank E GarceaDavid VinsonPublished in: Psychonomic bulletin & review (2024)
Tulving characterized semantic memory as a vast repository of meaning that underlies language and many other cognitive processes. This perspective on lexical and conceptual knowledge galvanized a new era of research undertaken by numerous fields, each with their own idiosyncratic methods and terminology. For example, "concept" has different meanings in philosophy, linguistics, and psychology. As such, many fundamental constructs used to delineate semantic theories remain underspecified and/or opaque. Weak construct specificity is among the leading causes of the replication crisis now facing psychology and related fields. Term ambiguity hinders cross-disciplinary communication, falsifiability, and incremental theory-building. Numerous cognitive subdisciplines (e.g., vision, affective neuroscience) have recently addressed these limitations via the development of consensus-based guidelines and definitions. The project to follow represents our effort to produce a multidisciplinary semantic glossary consisting of succinct definitions, background, principled dissenting views, ratings of agreement, and subjective confidence for 17 target constructs (e.g., abstractness, abstraction, concreteness, concept, embodied cognition, event semantics, lexical-semantic, modality, representation, semantic control, semantic feature, simulation, semantic distance, semantic dimension). We discuss potential benefits and pitfalls (e.g., implicit bias, prescriptiveness) of these efforts to specify a common nomenclature that other researchers might index in specifying their own theoretical perspectives (e.g., They said X, but I mean Y).