Tuesday, May 26, 2009

Kai-min Kevin Chang -- Friday May 29, 2009, noon

Speaker: Kai-min Kevin Chang (Language Technologies Institute, School of Computer Science, Carnegie Mellon University)

Time/Date: Friday May 29, 2009, noon.

Place: NSH 1507 (Note the room is not the usual NSH 3002)

Title: Quantitative modeling of the neural representation of adjective-noun phrases to account for fMRI activation

Abstract: Recent advances in functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (fMRI) offer a significant new approach to studying semantic representations in humans by making it possible to directly observe brain activity while people comprehend words and sentences. In this study, we investigate how humans comprehend adjective-noun phrases (e.g. strong dog) while their neural activity is recorded. Classification analysis shows that the distributed pattern of neural activity contains sufficient signal to decode differences among phrases. Furthermore, vector-based semantic models can explain a significant portion of systematic variance in the observed neural activity. Multiplicative composition models of the two-word phrase outperform additive models, consistent with the assumption that people use adjectives to modify the meaning of the noun, rather than conjoining the meaning of the adjective and noun.

This talk is based on the author's ACL 2009 paper.