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The broth in my brother's brothel: morpho-orthographic segmentation in visual word recognition.

TLDR
Results showed significant and equivalent masked priming effects in cases in which primes and targets appeared to be morphologically related, and priming in these conditions could be distinguished from nonmorphological form priming.
Abstract
Much research suggests that words comprising more than one morpheme are represented in a “decomposed” manner in the visual word recognition system. In the research presented here, we investigate what information is used to segment a word into its morphemic constituents and, in particular, whether semantic information plays a role in that segmentation. Participants made visual lexical decisions to stem targets preceded by masked primes sharing (1) a semantically transparent morphological relationship with the target (e.g.,cleaner-CLEAN), (2) an apparent morphological relationship but no semantic relationship with the target (e.g.,corner-CORN), and (3) a nonmorphological form relationship with the target (e.g.,brothel-BROTH). Results showed significant and equivalent masked priming effects in cases in which primes and targets appeared to be morphologically related, and priming in these conditions could be distinguished from nonmorphological form priming. We argue that these findings suggest a level of representation at which apparently complex words are decomposed on the basis of their morpho-orthographic properties. Implications of these findings for computational models of reading are discussed.

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Effects of Orthographic, Morphological and Semantic Overlap on Short-Term Memory for Words in Typical and Atypical Development

TL;DR: A probe detection task with lures sharing morphological, orthographic, or semantic overlap with the probe indicated that morphological processing is not constrained by phonology, and dyslexic children’s performance reflected a failure to remember distinctions between words sharing root morphemes.
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Does morphological structure modulate access to embedded word meaning in child readers

TL;DR: Italian elementary school children asked to make category decisions on words revealed that words were harder to reject as members of a category when the embedded stem was category-congruent, suggesting orthographic stems are activated and activation is fed forward to the semantic level regardless of morphological structure.
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Reading compound words by adult Korean-English bilinguals

TL;DR: The authors investigated how Korean-English bilinguals read compound words in Korean L1 and English L2 and found that Korean compound words are processed based on the morpheme unit rather than the salient visual syllable form.
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Morphological priming in bilingualism research

TL;DR: The authors describes how morphological priming can be used to study the processing of morphologically complex words in bilinguals and discusses a number of basic methodological pitfalls with regard to experimental design and materials.
Journal ArticleDOI

Syllable effects in beginning and intermediate European-Portuguese readers: Evidence from a sandwich masked go/no-go lexical decision task

TL;DR: Results showed reliable syllable effects only for intermediate readers and for CV and CVC words alike, and were discussed attending to current models of visual word recognition.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

A Solution to Plato's Problem: The Latent Semantic Analysis Theory of Acquisition, Induction, and Representation of Knowledge.

TL;DR: 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.
Journal ArticleDOI

DRC: a dual route cascaded model of visual word recognition and reading aloud.

TL;DR: The DRC model is a computational realization of the dual-route theory of reading, and is the only computational model of reading that can perform the 2 tasks most commonly used to study reading: lexical decision and reading aloud.
Journal ArticleDOI

DMDX: A Windows display program with millisecond accuracy

TL;DR: DMDX is a Windows-based program designed primarily for language-processing experiments that uses the features of Pentium class CPUs and the library routines provided in DirectX to provide accurate timing and synchronization of visual and audio output.
Journal ArticleDOI

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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Trending Questions (1)
What is it called when most og the words consist of more than one morpheme?

The phenomenon of words consisting of more than one morpheme is called morphologically complex words.