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    •   UVaDOC Home
    • SCIENTIFIC PRODUCTION
    • Departamentos
    • Dpto. Filología Inglesa
    • DEP27 - Artículos de revista
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    •   UVaDOC Home
    • SCIENTIFIC PRODUCTION
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    • Dpto. Filología Inglesa
    • DEP27 - Artículos de revista
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    Por favor, use este identificador para citar o enlazar este ítem:https://uvadoc.uva.es/handle/10324/70309

    Título
    Dissociating morphological and form priming with novel complex word primes: Evidence from masked priming, overt priming, and event-related potentials.
    Autor
    Fiorentino, Robert
    Politzer-Ahles, Steven
    Pak, Natalie
    Martínez García, María TeresaAutoridad UVA
    Coughlin, Caitlin
    Año del Documento
    2015
    Documento Fuente
    The Mental Lexicon, Enero 2015, Vol. 10, n. 3, p. 413-434
    Abstract
    Recent research suggests that visually-presented words are initially morphologically segmented whenever the letter-string can be exhaustively assigned to existing morphological representations, but not when an exhaustive parse is unavailable; e.g., priming is observed for both hunter → HUNT and brother → BROTH, but not for brothel → BROTH. Few studies have investigated whether this pattern extends to novel complex words, and the results to date (all from novel suffixed words) are mixed. In the current study, we examine whether novel compounds (drugrack → RACK) yield morphological priming which is dissociable from that in novel pseudoembedded words (slegrack → RACK). Using masked priming, we find significant and comparable priming in reaction times for word-final elements of both novel compounds and novel pseudoembedded words. Using overt priming, however, we find greater priming effects (in both reaction times and N400 amplitudes) for novel compounds compared to novel pseudoembedded words. These results are consistent with models assuming across-the-board activation of putative constituents, while also suggesting that morpheme activation may persevere despite the lack of an exhaustive morpheme-based parse when an exhaustive monomorphemic analysis is also unavailable. These findings highlight the critical role of the lexical status of the pseudoembedded prime in dissociating morphological and orthographic priming.
    Revisión por pares
    SI
    DOI
    10.1075/ml.10.3.05fio
    Propietario de los Derechos
    John Benjamins Publishing Company
    Idioma
    eng
    URI
    https://uvadoc.uva.es/handle/10324/70309
    Tipo de versión
    info:eu-repo/semantics/acceptedVersion
    Derechos
    restrictedAccess
    Collections
    • DEP27 - Artículos de revista [80]
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