There is a long-standing debate about the principles constraining the combinatorial properties of suffixes. Hay 2002 and Hay & Plag 2004 proposed a model in which suffixes can be ordered along a hierarchy of processing complexity. We show that this model generalizes to a larger set of suffixes, and we provide independent evidence supporting the claim that a higher rank in the ordering correlates with increased productivity. Behavioral data from lexical decision and word naming show, however, that this model has been one-sided in its exclusive focus on the importance of constituent-driven processing, and that it requires supplementation by a second and equally important focus on the role of memory. Finally, using concepts from graph theo...
Inflectional affixes expressing the same grammatical category (e.g., subject agreement) tend to appe...
There is a longstanding debate about how to appropriately model the combinability of affixes, especi...
<p></p><p>ABSTRACT Although many words are formed by more than one morphological constituent, not al...
Cross-linguistic studies of morphology have demonstrated that there is an asymmetry in the type of a...
and Plag & Baayen (2009) have developed an approach in which processing constraints are held acc...
The world’s languages tend to exhibit a suffixing preference, adding inflections to the ends of w...
The world’s languages tend to exhibit a suffixing preference, adding inflections to the ends of word...
This study explores the consequences of morphological connectivity for English compounds, combining ...
This paper uses experimental techniques and empirical data to support the notion that morphologicall...
International audienceEnglish morphophonology has aroused considerable interest in the wake of Choms...
Explaining why affixes occur in the order in which they do in languages has been an issue of much co...
This eye-tracking study explores visual recognition of Dutch suffixed words (e.g., plaats+ing ”placi...
International audiencePrevious research showed that handwriting production is mediated by linguistic...
Abstract: Word storage and processing have traditionally been modelled according to different comput...
There is a longstanding debate about how to appropriately model the combinability of affixes, especi...
Inflectional affixes expressing the same grammatical category (e.g., subject agreement) tend to appe...
There is a longstanding debate about how to appropriately model the combinability of affixes, especi...
<p></p><p>ABSTRACT Although many words are formed by more than one morphological constituent, not al...
Cross-linguistic studies of morphology have demonstrated that there is an asymmetry in the type of a...
and Plag & Baayen (2009) have developed an approach in which processing constraints are held acc...
The world’s languages tend to exhibit a suffixing preference, adding inflections to the ends of w...
The world’s languages tend to exhibit a suffixing preference, adding inflections to the ends of word...
This study explores the consequences of morphological connectivity for English compounds, combining ...
This paper uses experimental techniques and empirical data to support the notion that morphologicall...
International audienceEnglish morphophonology has aroused considerable interest in the wake of Choms...
Explaining why affixes occur in the order in which they do in languages has been an issue of much co...
This eye-tracking study explores visual recognition of Dutch suffixed words (e.g., plaats+ing ”placi...
International audiencePrevious research showed that handwriting production is mediated by linguistic...
Abstract: Word storage and processing have traditionally been modelled according to different comput...
There is a longstanding debate about how to appropriately model the combinability of affixes, especi...
Inflectional affixes expressing the same grammatical category (e.g., subject agreement) tend to appe...
There is a longstanding debate about how to appropriately model the combinability of affixes, especi...
<p></p><p>ABSTRACT Although many words are formed by more than one morphological constituent, not al...