Copyright © 2015 American Psychological AssociationResearch strongly suggests that printed words are recognized in terms of their constituent morphemes, but researchers have tended to consider the recognition of derivations and inflections in separate theoretical debates. Recently, Crepaldi et al. (2010) proposed a theory that claims to account for the recognition of both derivations and inflections. We investigated brain potentials in the context of masked priming to test 2 key predictions of this theory: (a) that regular inflections should prime their stems to a greater degree than irregular inflections should prime their stems and (b) that priming for regular inflections should arise earlier in the recognition process than priming for ir...
This paper reports results of a replication and extension of Silva & Clahsen (2008). We used the mas...
This paper reports results of a replication and extension of Silva & Clahsen (2008). We used the mas...
The authors compared sublexical and supralexical approaches to morphological processing with unambig...
For some time now, there has been much debate on the mechanisms by which morphologically complex wor...
Research on visual word identification has extensively investigated the role of morphemes, recurrent...
Morphological aspects of human language processing have been suggested by some to be reducible to t...
. .To explain processing differences between regular e.g., startrstarted and irregular e.g., thinkrt...
The Supplementary Material for this article can be found online at: http://journal.frontiersin.org/a...
AbstractPrevious studies suggest that different neural and functional mechanisms are involved in the...
Recent research suggests that visually-presented words are initially morphologically segmented whene...
Recent research suggests that visually-presented words are initially morphologically segmented whene...
This paper reports results from masked priming experiments investigating regular past-tense forms an...
We present results from cross-modal priming experiments on German participles and noun plurals. The ...
ERPs have been found to be sensitive to formal (i.e. orthographic and phonological) and semantic rel...
In the current paper we discuss the mechanisms that underlie the processing of inflectional and d...
This paper reports results of a replication and extension of Silva & Clahsen (2008). We used the mas...
This paper reports results of a replication and extension of Silva & Clahsen (2008). We used the mas...
The authors compared sublexical and supralexical approaches to morphological processing with unambig...
For some time now, there has been much debate on the mechanisms by which morphologically complex wor...
Research on visual word identification has extensively investigated the role of morphemes, recurrent...
Morphological aspects of human language processing have been suggested by some to be reducible to t...
. .To explain processing differences between regular e.g., startrstarted and irregular e.g., thinkrt...
The Supplementary Material for this article can be found online at: http://journal.frontiersin.org/a...
AbstractPrevious studies suggest that different neural and functional mechanisms are involved in the...
Recent research suggests that visually-presented words are initially morphologically segmented whene...
Recent research suggests that visually-presented words are initially morphologically segmented whene...
This paper reports results from masked priming experiments investigating regular past-tense forms an...
We present results from cross-modal priming experiments on German participles and noun plurals. The ...
ERPs have been found to be sensitive to formal (i.e. orthographic and phonological) and semantic rel...
In the current paper we discuss the mechanisms that underlie the processing of inflectional and d...
This paper reports results of a replication and extension of Silva & Clahsen (2008). We used the mas...
This paper reports results of a replication and extension of Silva & Clahsen (2008). We used the mas...
The authors compared sublexical and supralexical approaches to morphological processing with unambig...