Morphological sensitivity generalizes across modalities
Abstract
A growing body of psycholinguistic research suggests that visual and auditory word recognition involve morphological decomposition: Individual morphemes are extracted and lexically accessed when participants are presented with multi-morphemic stimuli. This view is supported by the Morpheme Interference Effect (MIE), where responses to pseudowords that contain real morphemes are slower and less accurate than responses to pseudowords that contain...
Paper Details
Title
Morphological sensitivity generalizes across modalities
Published Date
Nov 11, 2019
Journal
Volume
14
Issue
1
Pages
37 - 67
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