Is morphological decomposition limited to low-frequency words?

McCormick, Samantha F., Brysbaert, Marc and Rastle, Kathy

(2009)

McCormick, Samantha F., Brysbaert, Marc and Rastle, Kathy (2009) Is morphological decomposition limited to low-frequency words?. Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology, 62 (9).

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Abstract

On the basis of data from masked priming experiments, it has been argued that an automatic process of decomposition is applied to all morphologically structured stimuli, irrespective of their lexical characteristics (Rastle, Davis, New, 2004). So far, this claim has been tested only with respect to low-frequency primes and nonword primes. This is a limitation because some models of morphological processing postulate that only high-frequency complex words are recognized as whole forms. Thus, a more stringent test would be to determine whether high-frequency complex words also show evidence of masked priming. We report an experiment that compares masked-priming effects observed when the primes constitute morphologically structured nonwords (e.g., alarmer-ALARM), low-frequency words with a mean frequency of 2 per million (e.g., notional-NOTION), and high-frequency words with a mean frequency of 60 per million (e.g., national-NATION). These three conditions yielded significant and equivalent effects, lending strong support to the notion of a routine form of decomposition that is applied to all morphologically structured stimuli.

Information about this Version

This is a Submitted version
This version's date is: 2009
This item is not peer reviewed

Link to this Version

https://repository.royalholloway.ac.uk/items/3fd0bb84-add3-46d1-23c2-982dd38f4bf1/1/

Item TypeJournal Article
TitleIs morphological decomposition limited to low-frequency words?
AuthorsMcCormick, Samantha F.
Brysbaert, Marc
Rastle, Kathy
Uncontrolled KeywordsMorphological processing, Visual word recognition, Dual-route models, Reading, Masked priming, MORPHO-ORTHOGRAPHIC SEGMENTATION, RECOGNITION, ENGLISH, DUTCH
DepartmentsFaculty of Science\Psychology

Identifiers

doihttp://dx.doi.org/10.1080/17470210902849991

Deposited by Research Information System (atira) on 24-May-2012 in Royal Holloway Research Online.Last modified on 24-May-2012


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