Constituent-morpheme priming: Implications from the morphology of two-kanji compound words |
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Authors: | Terry Joyce |
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Affiliation: | Institute of Psychology, University of Tsukuba, Tennodai, Tsukuba 305-8572, Japan |
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Abstract: | Abstract: The diversity in the morphological structure of two‐kanji compound words is a matter of special concern for models of the Japanese mental lexicon. This study discusses two proposals for models of the Japanese mental lexicon – Hirose’s (1992, 1994, 1996 ) hypotheses and a Japanese lemma‐unit version of the multilevel interactive‐activation framework – in terms of their ability to cope with this diversity. As the proposals make different predictions concerning constituent‐morpheme priming, patterns of facilitation were examined in two experiments with five word‐formation principles as experimental conditions. Experiment 1, using the long stimulus onset asynchrony (SOA) of 3000 ms employed by Hirose (1992 ), only found significant differences between the first‐ and second‐element conditions in one of the word‐formation conditions. Experiment 2, using a short SOA of 250 ms, confirmed the pattern of priming obtained in Experiment 1. These results are more consistent with the prediction from the Japanese lemma‐unit model. |
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Keywords: | two-kanji compound words morphological structure mental lexicon constituent morpheme priming multilevel interactive-activation framework |
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