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Formal and semantic effects of morphological families on word recognition in Hebrew

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journal contribution
posted on 2018-08-28, 04:46 authored by Avital Deutsch, Victor Kuperman

In Hebrew, content words are usually composed of two interleaving morphemes; roots which carry semantic information, and word-patterns which mainly carry grammatical information. The family size effect in languages with non-concatenative morphology has been previously examined only with respect to the root. The present study reports a lexical-decision experiment with 260 Hebrew nouns representing a variety of nominal word-patterns and roots. We observed independent facilitatory effects of morphological family sizes of the roots and the nominal word-patterns. The family size effect of the nominal word-pattern was stronger for words with low frequency. The novelty of these findings is in showing in a within-stimuli design that both morphemes have a role in defining the complex family effect in a language with non-concatenated morphology, despite the massive differences in their linguistic characteristics. The data provide evidence in favour of the proposed multi-dimensional structure of the Hebrew lexicon.

Funding

This work was supported by the Lady Davis Foundation (Hebrew University of Jerusalem) visiting professorship and the following research grants to the second author: The Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada grant RGPIN/402395-2012 (Kuperman, PI), the Ontario Early Researcher award (Kuperman, PI), the Canada Research Chair (Kuperman, PI), the Canada Foundation for Innovation (Kuperman, PI), the SSHRC Partnership Training Grant 895-2016-1008 (Libben, PI).

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    Language Cognition and Neuroscience

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