Adore-able not adorable? Orthographic underspecification studied with masked repetition priming

McCormick, Samantha F., Rastle, Kathy and Davis, Matthew H.

(2009)

McCormick, Samantha F., Rastle, Kathy and Davis, Matthew H. (2009) Adore-able not adorable? Orthographic underspecification studied with masked repetition priming. European Journal of Cognitive Psychology, 21 (6).

Our Full Text Deposits

Full text access: Open

Full text file - 129.85 KB

Abstract

This paper reports three masked priming experiments examining morphological priming with nonword primes, using targets that were incompletely represented in the primes due to a missing "e'' at the morpheme boundary (e.g., adorage-adore). Primes were constructed with a vowel-initial suffix (e.g., adorage) in the first experiment and with a consonant-initial suffix (e.g., adorly) in the second experiment. Priming was observed in both experiments relative to an orthographic control condition. Experiment 3 was a control experiment designed to show that targets in the morphological and orthographic form conditions of the first two experiments were equally susceptible to priming. Overall, our findings provide support for a form of morphemic decomposition that is based on the mere appearance of morphological complexity (e.g., Rastle, Davis, & New, 2004), and demonstrate that this form of morphemic decomposition is robust to regular orthographic alterations that occur in morphologically complex words.

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This item is not peer reviewed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/71a58390-c2fa-b66b-8a53-7c853d6494d7/1/

Item TypeJournal Article
TitleAdore-able not adorable? Orthographic underspecification studied with masked repetition priming
AuthorsMcCormick, Samantha F.
Rastle, Kathy
Davis, Matthew H.
Uncontrolled KeywordsMorphology, Visual word recognition, Masked priming, Morphologically complex pseudowords, VISUAL WORD RECOGNITION, MORPHOLOGICAL DECOMPOSITION, MENTAL LEXICON, FAMILY-SIZE, HEBREW, SEGMENTATION, FREQUENCY, LANGUAGE, DUTCH
DepartmentsFaculty of Science\Psychology

Identifiers

doihttp://dx.doi.org/10.1080/09541440802366919

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


Details