This dissertation examines the theoretical construct of a ‘morpheme’ as a unit that is independent of semantics and phonology. Specifically, the dissertation examines multi-morphemic words that are semantically opaque, i.e., words whose meaning is not derivable from the meaning of the separate morphemes. While some models of lexical access posit abstract morphological representations (i.e., Full-Decomposition models), other models posit whole-word storage and processing either for all forms or for certain forms depending on factors like semantic transparency. Semantically opaque words are crucial for testing predictions of these different models of lexical access, as they allow us to investigate whether morphological processing occurs in th...
We sample from behavioral studies of visually presented inflected and derived words in the lexical d...
Linguists typically assume that words are lexically decomposed into constituent parts even when the ...
Research on morphology in word recognition has been plagued by conflicting results (McQueen & Cu...
This dissertation examines the theoretical construct of a ‘morpheme’ as a unit that is independent o...
The question of whether lexical decomposition is driven by semantic transparency in the lexical proc...
Decomposition theories of morphological processing in visual word recognition posit an early morpho-...
The authors report a study in Dutch that used an on-line preparation paradigm to test the issue of s...
In four lexical decision experiments we investigated masked morphological priming with Dutch prefixe...
We present models of semantic transparency in which the perceived trans- parency of English noun–nou...
This dissertation addresses a foundational debate regarding the role of structure and abstraction in...
Semantic transparency is a crucial factor in the processing of morphologically complex words, but se...
Two experiments examined priming from semantically transparent and opaque suffix-derivations (includ...
Linguists typically assume that a word is lexically decomposed into its constituent parts even when ...
In this eye-tracking study, we investigated how semantics inform morphological analysis at the early...
A largely overlooked side effect in most studies of morphological priming is a consistent main effec...
We sample from behavioral studies of visually presented inflected and derived words in the lexical d...
Linguists typically assume that words are lexically decomposed into constituent parts even when the ...
Research on morphology in word recognition has been plagued by conflicting results (McQueen & Cu...
This dissertation examines the theoretical construct of a ‘morpheme’ as a unit that is independent o...
The question of whether lexical decomposition is driven by semantic transparency in the lexical proc...
Decomposition theories of morphological processing in visual word recognition posit an early morpho-...
The authors report a study in Dutch that used an on-line preparation paradigm to test the issue of s...
In four lexical decision experiments we investigated masked morphological priming with Dutch prefixe...
We present models of semantic transparency in which the perceived trans- parency of English noun–nou...
This dissertation addresses a foundational debate regarding the role of structure and abstraction in...
Semantic transparency is a crucial factor in the processing of morphologically complex words, but se...
Two experiments examined priming from semantically transparent and opaque suffix-derivations (includ...
Linguists typically assume that a word is lexically decomposed into its constituent parts even when ...
In this eye-tracking study, we investigated how semantics inform morphological analysis at the early...
A largely overlooked side effect in most studies of morphological priming is a consistent main effec...
We sample from behavioral studies of visually presented inflected and derived words in the lexical d...
Linguists typically assume that words are lexically decomposed into constituent parts even when the ...
Research on morphology in word recognition has been plagued by conflicting results (McQueen & Cu...