Cross-linguistic perspectives on morphological processing

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書誌事項

Cross-linguistic perspectives on morphological processing

edited by Ram Frost & Jonathan Grainger

Psychology Press, 2000

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注記

"A special issue of Language and Cognitive Processes" -- t.p.

"This book is also a special issue of the journal 'Language and Cognitive Processes' which forms issues 4/5 of Volume 15 (2000). The page numbers are taken from the journal and so begin with p. 321"

Includes bibliographical references and index

内容説明・目次

内容説明

This special issue provides a unique analysis of critical issues in morphological processing by examining these in a variety of languages and by using different methodologies. The issue is based on the theoretical stance that the mapping of cognitive events involved in processing morphologically complex words, should depend on the linguistic environment of the native speaker. Studies in different languages are aimed at producing converging or contrasting evidence that would allow the formulation of a general theory of morphological processing, a theory that takes into account the specific characteristics of the orthography, phonology, and morphology of each language, and shows how these constrain possible architectures and algorithms for lexical processing. Nine experimental papers are included in this book. They bring evidence from Dutch, French, Finnish, German, Hebrew, and English. This collection of papers presents a significant variety of experimental methods such as conscious priming at various SOA's, masked priming, the monitoring of simple lexical decision, speech production in picture naming, eye movement tracking, measuring parafoveal preview benefits, and computer simulations in artificial languages. All papers suggest that lying at the intersection of orthographic, phonologic, and semantic coding, morphological structure must play a key role in the representation and processing of lexical organization. Language and Cognitive Processes is an international journal which published theoreticl and experimental research into the mental processess and representations involved in language use. The psychological study of language has attracted increasing interest over the past three decades, and Language and Cognitive Processes provides a common focus for this enterprise. It is a journal which emphasises the importance of an interdisciplinary approach to the study of language. Apart from research in experimental and developmental psychology, Language and Cognitive Processes publishes work derived from linguistics, philosophy, cognitive neuropsychology and computational modelling

目次

R. Frost, J. Grainger, Cross-linguistic Perspectives on Morphological Processing: An introduction. N. de Jong, R. Schreuder, H. Baayen, The Morphological Family Size Effect and Morphology. R. Betram, J. Hyoena, M. Laine, The Role of Context in Morphological Processing: Evidence from Finish. E. Niswander, A. Pollastsek, K. Rayne, The Processing of Derived and Inflected Suffixed Words During Reading. H. Giraudo, J. Grainger, Effects of Prime Word Frequency and Cumulative Root Frquency in Masked Morphological Priming. D.C. Plaut, L. Gonnerman, Are Non-semantic Morphological Effects Incompatible with a Distributed Connectionist Approach to Lexical Processing? A. Deutsch, R. Frost, A. Pollatsek, K. Rayner, Early Morphological Effects in Word Recognition in Hebrew: Evidence from Parafoveal Preview Benefit. K. Rastle, M.H. Davis, W.D. Marslen-Wilson, L. K. Tyler, Morphological and Semantic Effects in Visual Word Recognition: A Time-course study. K.I. Foster, T. Azuma, Masked Priming for Prefixed Words with Bound Stems: Does Submit Prime Permit? P. Zwitserlood, Morphological Effects on Speech Production: Evidence from Picture Naming.

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