» Articles » PMID: 29967979

Word Prevalence Norms for 62,000 English Lemmas

Overview
Publisher Springer
Specialty Social Sciences
Date 2018 Jul 4
PMID 29967979
Citations 54
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

We present word prevalence data for 61,858 English words. Word prevalence refers to the number of people who know the word. The measure was obtained on the basis of an online crowdsourcing study involving over 220,000 people. Word prevalence data are useful for gauging the difficulty of words and, as such, for matching stimulus materials in experimental conditions or selecting stimulus materials for vocabulary tests. Word prevalence also predicts word processing times, over and above the effects of word frequency, word length, similarity to other words, and age of acquisition, in line with previous findings in the Dutch language.

Citing Articles

Item-Level Analysis of Category Fluency Test Performance: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis of Studies of Normal and Neurologically Abnormal Ageing.

De Marco M, Wright L, Makovac E Neuropsychol Rev. 2025; .

PMID: 39841364 DOI: 10.1007/s11065-024-09657-z.


Grasping Variance in Word Norms: Individual Differences in Motor Imagery and Semantic Ratings.

Muraki E, Born S, Pexman P J Cogn. 2025; 8(1):12.

PMID: 39803178 PMC: 11720573. DOI: 10.5334/joc.418.


Universality of representation in biological and artificial neural networks.

Hosseini E, Casto C, Zaslavsky N, Conwell C, Richardson M, Fedorenko E bioRxiv. 2025; .

PMID: 39764030 PMC: 11703180. DOI: 10.1101/2024.12.26.629294.


Moving beyond word frequency based on tally counting: AI-generated familiarity estimates of words and phrases are an interesting additional index of language knowledge.

Brysbaert M, Martinez G, Reviriego P Behav Res Methods. 2024; 57(1):28.

PMID: 39733132 DOI: 10.3758/s13428-024-02561-7.


The Italian Crowdsourcing Project: Visual word recognition times for 130,495 Italian words.

Amenta S, de Varda A, Mandera P, Keuleers E, Brysbaert M, Marelli M Behav Res Methods. 2024; 57(1):26.

PMID: 39733067 DOI: 10.3758/s13428-024-02548-4.