The role of stem frequency in morphological processing

The aim of the present research is to investigate frequency effects in morphological processing and to provide insights into the role of the stem in lexical access. To this aim we conducted a masked priming experiment associated with a lexical decision task (Forster and Davis 1984) focused on Italia...

Πλήρης περιγραφή

Λεπτομέρειες βιβλιογραφικής εγγραφής
Κύριοι συγγραφείς: Giraudo, Hélène, Dal Maso, Serena, Piccinin, Sabrina
Μορφή: Online
Γλώσσα:English
Έκδοση: Mediterranean Morphology Meetings (MMM) 2016
Θέματα:
Διαθέσιμο Online:https://pasithee.library.upatras.gr/mmm/article/view/2725
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spelling oai:ojs.pasithee.library.upatras.gr:article-27252019-09-11T07:06:37Z The role of stem frequency in morphological processing Giraudo, Hélène Dal Maso, Serena Piccinin, Sabrina morphological processing; stem frequency; Italian; masked priming The aim of the present research is to investigate frequency effects in morphological processing and to provide insights into the role of the stem in lexical access. To this aim we conducted a masked priming experiment associated with a lexical decision task (Forster and Davis 1984) focused on Italian suffixed words, in which we manipulated the frequency of the stem of the target words with respect to the derivative primes. More precisely, we opposed high frequency stem targets (e.g., trasferimento ‘transfer’- trasferire ‘to transfer’) to low frequency stem targets (e.g., motivazione ‘motivation’ - motivare ‘to motivate’); the frequency of the primes, on the other hand, was comparable. Results show full morphological priming effects for both types of targets, irrespective of stem frequency. This suggests that suffixed words are accessed holistically and not through the stem and therefore via a decomposition process, as suggested by previous studies based on simple lexical decision tasks. We argue that, while the lexical decision task is not suited to explore the very early stages of word recognition, given that the derived word is perceived consciously, masked priming focuses on fast automatic non-conscious mechanisms of lexical access, as the activation of the masked prime is constrained by strictly determined time limits. The masked priming paradigm therefore does not examine the entire process of word recognition as the lexical decision task does, but represents a window on the transfer of activation between a prime and a target. Mediterranean Morphology Meetings (MMM) 2016-08-22 info:eu-repo/semantics/article info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion Peer-reviewed Article application/pdf https://pasithee.library.upatras.gr/mmm/article/view/2725 10.26220/mmm.2725 Mediterranean Morphology Meetings; Vol 10 (2016): Quo vadis morphology?; 64-72 Mediterranean Morphology Meeting; Vol 10 (2016): Quo vadis morphology?; 64-72 1826-7491 eng https://pasithee.library.upatras.gr/mmm/article/view/2725/2988
institution UPatras
collection Pasithee
language English
topic 0
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computational morphology; paradigms; inflection; derivation; Levenshtein distance
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morphological processing; stem frequency; Italian; masked priming
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compound formation; morphological productivity; productivity measures; corpus-based statistical methods
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suspended affixation; Lexical Integrity Hypothesis; derivational suffixes; coordination
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roots; Hebrew; Spanish; cross-linguistic
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motion events; typological change; Latin linguistics; sytem; usage
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compounding; Italian; overabundance; number inflection
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0
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reciprocals; reflexives; templates; Hebrew; collective and distributive; root
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features; morphology; periphrasis
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0
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0
spellingShingle 0
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computational morphology; paradigms; inflection; derivation; Levenshtein distance
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0
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morphological processing; stem frequency; Italian; masked priming
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compound formation; morphological productivity; productivity measures; corpus-based statistical methods
0
0
0
0
0
0
suspended affixation; Lexical Integrity Hypothesis; derivational suffixes; coordination
0
0
roots; Hebrew; Spanish; cross-linguistic
0
0
0
0
0
motion events; typological change; Latin linguistics; sytem; usage
0
0
0
0
0
compounding; Italian; overabundance; number inflection
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
reciprocals; reflexives; templates; Hebrew; collective and distributive; root
0
0
features; morphology; periphrasis
0
0
0
0
Giraudo, Hélène
Dal Maso, Serena
Piccinin, Sabrina
The role of stem frequency in morphological processing
topic_facet 0
0
0
0
0
computational morphology; paradigms; inflection; derivation; Levenshtein distance
0
0
0
0
0
0
morphological processing; stem frequency; Italian; masked priming
0
0
0
0
0
compound formation; morphological productivity; productivity measures; corpus-based statistical methods
0
0
0
0
0
0
suspended affixation; Lexical Integrity Hypothesis; derivational suffixes; coordination
0
0
roots; Hebrew; Spanish; cross-linguistic
0
0
0
0
0
motion events; typological change; Latin linguistics; sytem; usage
0
0
0
0
0
compounding; Italian; overabundance; number inflection
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
reciprocals; reflexives; templates; Hebrew; collective and distributive; root
0
0
features; morphology; periphrasis
0
0
0
0
format Online
author Giraudo, Hélène
Dal Maso, Serena
Piccinin, Sabrina
author_facet Giraudo, Hélène
Dal Maso, Serena
Piccinin, Sabrina
author_sort Giraudo, Hélène
title The role of stem frequency in morphological processing
title_short The role of stem frequency in morphological processing
title_full The role of stem frequency in morphological processing
title_fullStr The role of stem frequency in morphological processing
title_full_unstemmed The role of stem frequency in morphological processing
title_sort role of stem frequency in morphological processing
description The aim of the present research is to investigate frequency effects in morphological processing and to provide insights into the role of the stem in lexical access. To this aim we conducted a masked priming experiment associated with a lexical decision task (Forster and Davis 1984) focused on Italian suffixed words, in which we manipulated the frequency of the stem of the target words with respect to the derivative primes. More precisely, we opposed high frequency stem targets (e.g., trasferimento ‘transfer’- trasferire ‘to transfer’) to low frequency stem targets (e.g., motivazione ‘motivation’ - motivare ‘to motivate’); the frequency of the primes, on the other hand, was comparable. Results show full morphological priming effects for both types of targets, irrespective of stem frequency. This suggests that suffixed words are accessed holistically and not through the stem and therefore via a decomposition process, as suggested by previous studies based on simple lexical decision tasks. We argue that, while the lexical decision task is not suited to explore the very early stages of word recognition, given that the derived word is perceived consciously, masked priming focuses on fast automatic non-conscious mechanisms of lexical access, as the activation of the masked prime is constrained by strictly determined time limits. The masked priming paradigm therefore does not examine the entire process of word recognition as the lexical decision task does, but represents a window on the transfer of activation between a prime and a target.
publisher Mediterranean Morphology Meetings (MMM)
publishDate 2016
url https://pasithee.library.upatras.gr/mmm/article/view/2725
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