What is this thing called frequency?

D L Nelson, C L McEvoy
Author Information
  1. D L Nelson: Department of Psychology, University of South Florida, Tampa 33620-8200, USA. nelson@luna.cas.usf.edu

Abstract

When researchers are interested in the influence of long-term knowledge on performance, printed word frequency is typically the variable of choice. Despite this preference, we know little about what frequency norms measure. They ostensibly index how often and how recently words are experienced, but words appear in context, so frequency potentially reflects an influence of connections with other words. This paper presents the results of a large free association study as well as the results of experiments designed to evaluate the hypothesis that common words have stronger connections to other words. The norms indicate that common words tend to be more concrete but they do not appear to have more associates, stronger associates, or more connections among their associates. Two extralist cued recall experiments showed that, with other attributes being equal, high- and low-frequency words were equally effective as test cues. These results suggest that frequency does not achieve its effects because of stronger or greater numbers of connections to other words, as implied in SAM. Other results indicated that common words have more connections from other words, including their associates, and that free association provides a valid index of associative strength.

References

  1. J Exp Psychol. 1968 Jan;76(1):Suppl:1-25 [PMID: 5672258]
  2. Psychon Bull Rev. 1997 Jun;4(2):145-66 [PMID: 21331823]
  3. J Exp Psychol Learn Mem Cogn. 1993 Jul;19(4):747-64 [PMID: 8345322]
  4. Mem Cognit. 1974 Mar;2(2):261-9 [PMID: 24214752]
  5. Mem Cognit. 1997 Nov;25(6):785-96 [PMID: 9421564]
  6. J Exp Psychol. 1967 Mar;73(3):473-8 [PMID: 6032555]
  7. Mem Cognit. 1974 May;2(3):406-12 [PMID: 21274765]
  8. Psychol Rev. 1998 Apr;105(2):299-324 [PMID: 9577240]
  9. Mem Cognit. 1986 Jan;14(1):79-94 [PMID: 3713510]
  10. Psychol Rev. 1984 Jan;91(1):1-67 [PMID: 6571421]
  11. J Exp Psychol. 1965 Aug;70:163-8 [PMID: 14341747]
  12. Am J Psychol. 1956 Mar;69(1):125-7 [PMID: 13302515]
  13. Am J Psychol. 1952 Jan;65(1):75-9 [PMID: 14903210]
  14. J Abnorm Psychol. 1957 Jan;54(1):75-85 [PMID: 13405659]
  15. Psychol Rev. 1992 Apr;99(2):322-48 [PMID: 1594728]
  16. Q J Exp Psychol A. 1990 Feb;42(1):121-45 [PMID: 2326488]
  17. Psychol Res. 1995;57(3-4):203-14 [PMID: 7753950]
  18. Psychol Rev. 1952 Nov;59(6):421-30 [PMID: 13004145]

Grants

  1. AG13973/NIA NIH HHS
  2. MH16360/NIMH NIH HHS

MeSH Term

Adult
Attention
Female
Humans
Male
Mental Recall
Psycholinguistics
Semantics
Verbal Learning

Word Cloud

Created with Highcharts 10.0.0wordsconnectionsfrequencyresultsassociatescommonstrongerinfluencenormsindexappearfreeassociationexperimentsresearchersinterestedlong-termknowledgeperformanceprintedwordtypicallyvariablechoiceDespitepreferenceknowlittlemeasureostensiblyoftenrecentlyexperiencedcontextpotentiallyreflectspaperpresentslargestudywelldesignedevaluatehypothesisindicatetendconcreteamongTwoextralistcuedrecallshowedattributesequalhigh-low-frequencyequallyeffectivetestcuessuggestachieveeffectsgreaternumbersimpliedSAMindicatedincludingprovidesvalidassociativestrengththingcalledfrequency?

Similar Articles

Cited By