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Evidence for early morphological decomposition: Combining masked priming with magnetoencephalography

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TLDR
Data regarding the transitional probability from stem to affix in a post hoc comparison is presented, which suggests that this factor may modulate early morphological decomposition, particularly for opaque words.
Abstract
Are words stored as morphologically structured representations? If so, when during word recognition are morphological pieces accessed? Recent masked priming studies support models that assume early decomposition of (potentially) morphologically complex words. The electrophysiological evidence, however, is inconsistent. We combined masked morphological priming with magneto-encephalography (MEG), a technique particularly adept at indexing processes involved in lexical access. The latency of an MEG component peaking, on average, 220 msec post-onset of the target in left occipito-temporal brain regions was found to be sensitive to the morphological prime-target relationship under masked priming conditions in a visual lexical decision task. Shorter latencies for related than unrelated conditions were observed both for semantically transparent (cleaner-CLEAN) and opaque (corner-CORN) prime-target pairs, but not for prime-target pairs with only an orthographic relationship (brothel-BROTH). These effects are likely to reflect a prelexical level of processing where form-based representations of stems and affixes are represented and are in contrast to models positing no morphological structure in lexical representations. Moreover, we present data regarding the transitional probability from stem to affix in a post hoc comparison, which suggests that this factor may modulate early morphological decomposition, particularly for opaque words. The timing of a robust MEG component sensitive to the morphological relatedness of prime-target pairs can be used to further understand the neural substrates and the time course of lexical processing.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Morphological processing in the brain: The good (inflection), the bad (derivation) and the ugly (compounding).

TL;DR: A comprehensive overview on the state-of-the-art of the research on the neural mechanisms of morphological processing covering a wide range of electro- and magnetoencephalography (EEG and MEG) as well as structural/functional magnetic resonance imaging (s/fMRI) studies that focus on morphologicalprocessing.
Journal ArticleDOI

Tracking hierarchical processing in morphological decomposition with brain potentials.

TL;DR: Examining brain potentials as participants made lexical decisions to unprimed morphological, pseudomorphological, and nonmorphological stimuli provides unambiguous support for a hierarchical model of morphological processing whereby decomposition is based initially on orthographic analysis and is only later constrained by semantic information.
Journal ArticleDOI

MEG masked priming evidence for form-based decomposition of irregular verbs.

TL;DR: Activity in this fROI was modulated by the masked priming manipulation for irregular verbs, during the time window of the M170, and the results favor a single mechanism account of the English past tense, in which even irregulars are decomposed into stems and affixes prior to lexical access.
Journal ArticleDOI

Neural dynamics of inflectional and derivational morphology processing in the human brain

TL;DR: The results suggest that derivations are more likely to form unitary representations than inflections which are likely to be processed combinatorially, and imply at least partially distinct brain mechanisms for the processing and representation of these two types of morphology.
Journal ArticleDOI

Neurophysiological evidence for whole form retrieval of complex derived words: a mismatch negativity study.

TL;DR: This study uses an event-related potential brain response capable of indexing both whole-form retrieval and combinatorial processing, the Mismatch Negativity (MMN), to investigate early brain activity elicited by morphologically complex derived words in German and found that congruent derived words elicited a stronger MMN than incongruent derived Words, beginning about 150 ms after perception of the critical morpheme.
References
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Repetition priming and frequency attenuation in lexical access

TL;DR: The authors showed that the frequency attenuation effect is a product of the involvement of the episodic memory system in the lexical decision process, which is supported by the demonstration of constant repetition effects for high and low-frequency words when the priming stimulus is masked; the masking is assumed to minimize the influence of any possible episodic trace of the prime.
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On learning the past tenses of English verbs

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