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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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Moving beyond Kučera and Francis: A critical evaluation of current word frequency norms and the introduction of a new and improved word frequency measure for American English

TL;DR: The size of the corpus, the language register on which the corpus is based, and the definition of the frequency measure were investigated, finding that lemma frequencies are not superior to word form frequencies in English and that a measure of contextual diversity is better than a measure based on raw frequency of occurrence.
Journal ArticleDOI

Ending the reading wars: reading acquisition from novice to expert

TL;DR: A comprehensive tutorial review of the science of learning to read, spanning from children’s earliest alphabetic skills through to the fluent word recognition and skilled text comprehension characteristic of expert readers is presented.
Journal Article

Ending the Reading Wars: Reading Acquisition From Novice to Expert (vol 19, pg 5, 2018)

TL;DR: This article present a comprehensive tutorial review of the science of learning to read, spanning from children's earliest alphabetic skills through to the fluent word recognition and skilled text comprehension characteristic of expert readers.
Journal ArticleDOI

An amorphous model for morphological processing in visual comprehension based on naive discriminative learning.

TL;DR: A 2-layer symbolic network model based on the equilibrium equations of the Rescorla-Wagner model (Danks, 2003) is proposed, showing that for pseudo-derived words no special morpho-orthographic segmentation mechanism is required and predicting that productive affixes afford faster response latencies for new words.
Journal ArticleDOI

Morphological decomposition based on the analysis of orthography

TL;DR: It is argued that the weight of evidence now suggests that the recognition of morphologically complex words begins with a rapid morphemic segmentation based solely on the analysis of orthography.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Lexical storage and retrieval of prefixed words

TL;DR: This paper found that nonwords that are stems of prefixed words (e.g., juvenate ) take longer to classify than nonwords which are not stems (e., pertoire ), suggesting that the nonword stem is directly represented in the lexicon.
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Morphology and meaning in the English mental lexicon.

TL;DR: This article investigated the lexical entry for morphologically complex words in English using a cross-modal repetition priming task and found that morphological decomposition of semantically transparent forms is independent of phonological transparency, suggesting that morphemic representations are phonologically abstract.
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Morphological and semantic effects in visual word recognition: A time-course study

TL;DR: This article found that morphological structure plays a significant role in early visual recognition of English words that is independent of both semantic and orthographic relatedness, and reported two sets of visual priming experiments in which the morphological, semantic, and Orthographic relationships between primes and targets are varied in three SOA conditions (43 ms, 72 ms, and 230 ms).
Journal ArticleDOI

Are non-semantic morphological effects incompatible with a distributed connectionist approach to lexical processing?

TL;DR: Simulations in which a set of morphologically related words varying in semantic transparency were embedded in either a morphologically rich or impoverished artificial language found that morphological priming increased with degree of semantic transparency in both languages.
Journal ArticleDOI

Memory representation for morphologically related words.

TL;DR: The authors investigated the memory status of inflectional forms of verbs (S, ED, ING, irregular past tense words, and adjective and nominal derivatives of verbs) and found that they do not have memory representations separate from their base verbs.
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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.