The present experiments were designed to explore the theory of early morpho-orthographic segmentation (Rastle, Davis, & New, Psychonomic Bulletin & Review 11,1090-1098, 2004), which postulates that written words with a true morphologically complex structure (cleaner) and those with a morphological pseudostructure (corner) are both decomposed into affix and stem morphemes. We used masked complex transposed-letter (TL) nonword primes in a lexical decision task. Experiment 1 replicated the well-known masked TL-priming effect using monomorphemic nonword primes (e. g., wran-WARN). Experiment 2 used the same nonword TL stems as in Experiment 1, but combined them with real suffixes (e. g., ish as in wranish-WARN). Priming was compared with that fr...
Recent evidence has revealed conflicting results regarding the influence of letter transpositions du...
International audienceOne key finding in support of the hypothesis that written words are automatica...
The last 40 years have witnessed a growing interest in the mechanisms underlying the visual identifi...
Models of morphological processing make different predictions about whether morphologically complex ...
Two experiments used the cross-case same-different task to test whether the orthographically driven ...
Thesis (PhD)--Macquarie University, Faculty of Human Sciences, Macquarie Centre for Cognitive Scienc...
Many studies have previously reported that the recognition of a stem target (e.g., teach) is facilit...
Research on visual word identification has extensively investigated the role of morphemes, recurrent...
We tested the predictions of a dual-route model of complex word reading according to which morpho-or...
■ Are words stored as morphologically structured representa-tions? If so, when during word recogniti...
Two experiments examined priming from semantically transparent and opaque suffix-derivations (includ...
Much of the evidence for morphological decomposition accounts of complex word identification has rel...
Recent research using masked priming has suggested that there is a form of morphological decompositi...
Much research suggests that words comprising more than one morpheme are decomposed into morphemes in...
Masked priming studies have repeatedly provided evidence for a form-based morpho-orthographic segmen...
Recent evidence has revealed conflicting results regarding the influence of letter transpositions du...
International audienceOne key finding in support of the hypothesis that written words are automatica...
The last 40 years have witnessed a growing interest in the mechanisms underlying the visual identifi...
Models of morphological processing make different predictions about whether morphologically complex ...
Two experiments used the cross-case same-different task to test whether the orthographically driven ...
Thesis (PhD)--Macquarie University, Faculty of Human Sciences, Macquarie Centre for Cognitive Scienc...
Many studies have previously reported that the recognition of a stem target (e.g., teach) is facilit...
Research on visual word identification has extensively investigated the role of morphemes, recurrent...
We tested the predictions of a dual-route model of complex word reading according to which morpho-or...
■ Are words stored as morphologically structured representa-tions? If so, when during word recogniti...
Two experiments examined priming from semantically transparent and opaque suffix-derivations (includ...
Much of the evidence for morphological decomposition accounts of complex word identification has rel...
Recent research using masked priming has suggested that there is a form of morphological decompositi...
Much research suggests that words comprising more than one morpheme are decomposed into morphemes in...
Masked priming studies have repeatedly provided evidence for a form-based morpho-orthographic segmen...
Recent evidence has revealed conflicting results regarding the influence of letter transpositions du...
International audienceOne key finding in support of the hypothesis that written words are automatica...
The last 40 years have witnessed a growing interest in the mechanisms underlying the visual identifi...