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Morphological Structure, Lexical Representation and Lexical Access (RLE Linguistics C: Applied Linguistics) - A Special Issue of Language and Cognitive Processes (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R3,880
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Morphological Structure, Lexical Representation and Lexical Access (RLE Linguistics C: Applied Linguistics) - A Special Issue of Language and Cognitive Processes (Hardcover)
Series: Routledge Library Editions: Linguistics
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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The main concern of this work is whether morphemes play a role in
the lexical representation and processing of several types of
polymorphemic words and, more particularly, at what precise
representational and processing level. The book comprises two
theoretical contributions and a number of empirical ones. One
theoretical paper discusses several possible motivations for a
morphologically organised mental lexicon (like the economy of
representation view, and the efficiency of processing view), and
lays out the weaknesses that are associated with some of these
motivations. The other theoretical paper offers an
interactive-activation reinterpretation of the findings that were
originally reported within the lexical search framework. The
empirical papers together cover a relatively broad array of
language types and mainly deal with visual word recognition in
normals in the context of lexical morphology (derived and compound
words). Evidence is reported on the function of stems and affixes
as processing units in prefixed and suffixed derivations. The role
of semantic transparency in the lexical representation of compounds
is studied, as is the effect of orthographic ambiguity on the
parsing of novel compounds. The inflection-derivational distinction
is approached in the context of Finnish, a highly agglutinative
language with much richer morphology than the languages usually
studied in psycholinguistic experiments on polymorphemic words. Two
other contributions also approach the study object in the context
of relatively uncharted domains: one presents data on Chinese, a
language which uses a different script-type (logographic) from the
languages that are usually studied (alphabetic script), and another
one presents data on language production.
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