Authors
Thomas K Landauer, Susan T Dumais
Publication date
1997/4
Journal
Psychological review
Volume
104
Issue
2
Pages
211
Publisher
American Psychological Association
Description
How do people know as much as they do with as little information as they get? The problem takes many forms; learning vocabulary from text is an especially dramatic and convenient case for research. A new general theory of acquired similarity and knowledge representation, latent semantic analysis (LSA), is presented and used to successfully simulate such learning and several other psycholinguistic phenomena. By inducing global knowledge indirectly from local co-occurrence data in a large body of representative text, LSA acquired knowledge about the full vocabulary of English at a comparable rate to schoolchildren. LSA uses no prior linguistic or perceptual similarity knowledge; it is based solely on a general mathematical learning method that achieves powerful inductive effects by extracting the right number of dimensions (eg, 300) to represent objects and contexts. Relations to other theories, phenomena …
Total citations
19981999200020012002200320042005200620072008200920102011201220132014201520162017201820192020202120222023202447648819614018923725626834836940639236642945850646447743544346245838739937287