Abstract

Psycholinguistic research on the processing of morphologically complex words has largely focused on debates about how/if lexical stems are recognized, stored, and retrieved. Comparatively little processing research has investigated similar issues for functional affixes. In Word or Lexeme Based Morphology (Aronoff 1994), affixes are not representational units on par with stems or roots. This view is in stark contrast to the claims of linguistic theories like Distributed Morphology (Halle & Marantz 1993), which assign rich representational content to affixes. We conducted a series of eight visual lexical decision studies, evaluating effects of derivational affix priming along with stem priming, identity priming, form priming, and semantic priming at long and short lags. We find robust and consistent affix priming (but not semantic or form priming) with lags up to 33 items, supporting the position that affixes are morphemes, i.e., representational units on par with stems. Intriguingly, we find only weaker evidence for the long-lag stem priming effect found in other studies. We interpret this potential asymmetry in terms of the salience of different morphological contexts for recollection memory.

Highlights

  • Language depends on the combination of discrete units

  • We found an interaction between prime type and prime distance, but follow-up pairwise contrasts revealed no significant differences between conditions, and there was no main effect of prime distance

  • We conducted a series of visual lexical decision priming experiments investigating the extent to which a prime and target which share an English derivational affix (-ish, -ize, etc.) demonstrated the same or different priming effects as other kinds of linguistically related prime/target pairs over long and short lags

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Summary

Introduction

Language depends on the combination of discrete units. As explained in Marantz (2013; 2016), morphemes are abstract types in the sense that they are reducible neither to sound (or letter strings) nor to meaning. Morphemes are the atomic units that underlie a language’s mapping between sound and meaning. Tokens of morphemes are identical to each other, despite variation in the pronunciation or the contextualized meaning of any use of a morpheme. Each utterance of cat may differ in its acoustic properties and in its specific meaning in the sentential and discourse context in which it is uttered, but each occurrence is a repetition of the same morpheme and identical as such; each occurrence is a token of the same exact type

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