Authors
Aureliu Lavric, Heike Elchlepp, Kathleen Rastle
Publication date
2012/8
Journal
Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance
Volume
38
Issue
4
Pages
811
Publisher
American Psychological Association
Description
One important debate in psycholinguistics concerns the nature of morphological decomposition processes in visual word recognition (eg, darkness={dark}+{-ness}). One theory claims that these processes arise during orthographic analysis and prior to accessing meaning (Rastle & Davis, 2008), and another argues that these processes arise through greater temporal overlap between the activation of orthographic and semantic information (Feldman, O'Connor, & Moscoso del Prado Martín, 2009). This issue has been the subject of intense debate in studies using masked priming but has yet to be resolved unequivocally. The present study takes another approach to resolving this controversy by examining brain potentials as participants made lexical decisions to unprimed morphological (darkness), pseudomorphological (corner), and nonmorphological (brothel) stimuli. Results revealed a difference from∼ 190 ms …
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Scholar articles
A Lavric, H Elchlepp, K Rastle - … of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and …, 2012