Advanced Search

European Journal of Cognitive Psychology

Volume 21, Issue 4, 2009

Is Milkman a superhero like Batman? Constituent morphological priming in compound words

Is Milkman a superhero like Batman? Constituent morphological priming in compound words

DOI:
10.1080/09541440802079835
Jon Andoni Duñabeitiaa*, Itziar Lakab, Manuel Pereac & Manuel Carreirasa

pages 615-640

Available online: 06 Apr 2009

Abstract

In the present study, we examined morphological decomposition of Basque compound words in a series of masked priming lexical decision experiments. In Experiment 1, Basque compound words could be briefly preceded by other compounds that shared either the first or second constituent, or by unrelated noncompound words. Results showed a significant priming effect for words that shared a constituent, independently of its position. In Experiment 2, compound words were preceded by other compound words that shared one of their constituents, but in a different lexeme position (e.g., the first constituent of the compound that acted as a prime was the second constituent of the compound that acted as a target). Results again showed a constituent priming effect (i.e., location in the string is not necessary for priming to occur). In Experiment 3, we demonstrated that these priming effects were not due to mere form overlap: pairs of noncompound words that shared either the beginning or the ending chunk did not produce a priming effect. Taken together, the present results converge with previous data on orthographic/morphological priming and provide evidence favouring early morphological decomposition.

Keywords

 

Details

  • Available online: 06 Apr 2009

Author affiliations

  • a Instituto de Tecnologías Biomédicas, and Universidad de La Laguna, Tenerife, Spain
  • b Euskal Herriko Unibertsitatea (UPV/EHU), Leioa Biscay, Spain
  • c Universitat de València, València, Spain

Journal news

How to get published - video out now!

Librarians

Taylor & Francis Group