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- (PDF) Formal and semantic effects of morphological families on word . . .
Abstract and Figures In Hebrew, content words are usually composed of two interleaving morphemes; roots which carry semantic information, and word-patterns which mainly carry grammatical information
- Early morphological effects in word recognition in Hebrew: Evidence . . .
These results are the first to demonstrate early morphological effects in the context of sentence reading in which no external task is imposed on the reader, and converge with previous findings of morphemic priming in Hebrew using the masked priming paradigm, and morphological parafoveal preview benefit effects in a single-word identification task Expand 88 PDF
- Semantic Effects in Morphological Priming: The Case of Hebrew Stems . . .
To what extent is morphological representation in different languages dependent on semantic information? Unlike Indo-European languages, the Semitic mental lexicon has been argued to be purely “morphologically driven”, with complex stems represented in a decomposed format (root + vowel pattern) irrespectively of their semantic properties
- Word-level morphology: A psycholinguistic perspective on linear . . .
Hebrew morphology is rich in a number of senses which converge together Firstly, from a semantic perspective, many grammatical and lexical notions are expressed in word-structure Nouns and adjectives are obligatorily inflected for gender and number, verbs for gender, number, person and tense, prepositions for number, gender and person
- 1 Running head: MORPHOLOGICAL FAMILIES IN HEBREW - ResearchGate
A morphologically complex word is necessarily at an intersection of two or more families of words, each showing a different degree of formal and semantic coherence For instance, a derived English
- (PDF) Semantic effects in morphological priming: The case of Hebrew stems
We conclude that semantic effects in morphological priming are also obtained in Semitic languages, but they are crucially dependent on type of morpho-lexical representation
- Effects of morphological family on word recognition in normal aging . . .
beneficial effect of morphological family members is mainly driven by overlapping semantics This is consistent with other work showing that converging semantics from multiple sources speeds up word processing and reduces the size of the N400 component For example, a word like doctor primes a semantically related word like nurse, thus, facilitating its recognition The same mechanism may be
- Formal and semantic effects of morphological families on word . . .
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
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