Literature DB >> 16243387

Stem allomorphy in the Spanish mental lexicon: evidence from behavioral and ERP experiments.

Rafael Enrique Linares1, Antoni Rodriguez-Fornells, Harald Clahsen.   

Abstract

This study presents results from a nonce-word elicited production task and a reading experiment using event-related brain potentials (ERPs) investigating finite forms of Spanish verbs which consist of marked stems and regular person and number agreement suffixes. The first experiment showed that unmarked stems are productively extended to nonce words, whereas marked stems generalize more restrictively to nonce words, based on lexical similarity to existing stem forms. The second experiment yielded a lexical ERP signature for stem violations and an ERP pattern signaling morpho-syntactic (rule-based) processing for suffix violations. We argue that stem allomorphy is lexically represented in the Spanish mental lexicon, with marked stems forming subnodes of structured lexical entries.

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Year:  2005        PMID: 16243387     DOI: 10.1016/j.bandl.2005.08.008

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Brain Lang        ISSN: 0093-934X            Impact factor:   2.381


  6 in total

1.  Verbal Inflectional Morphology in L1 and L2 Spanish: A Frequency Effects Study Examining Storage versus Composition.

Authors:  Harriet Wood Bowden; Matthew P Gelfand; Cristina Sanz; Michael T Ullman
Journal:  Lang Learn       Date:  2010-02-17

2.  Spoken verb processing in Spanish: An analysis using a new online resource.

Authors:  Semilla M Rivera; Elizabeth A Bates; Araceli Orozco-Figueroa; Nicole Y Y Wicha
Journal:  Appl Psycholinguist       Date:  2010-01

3.  Spatiotemporal Dynamics of the Processing of Spoken Inflected and Derived Words: A Combined EEG and MEG Study.

Authors:  Alina Leminen; Miika Leminen; Minna Lehtonen; Päivi Nevalainen; Sari Ylinen; Lilli Kimppa; Christian Sannemann; Jyrki P Mäkelä; Teija Kujala
Journal:  Front Hum Neurosci       Date:  2011-07-21       Impact factor: 3.169

4.  Morphological processing as we know it: an analytical review of morphological effects in visual word identification.

Authors:  Simona Amenta; Davide Crepaldi
Journal:  Front Psychol       Date:  2012-07-12

5.  Electrophysiological evidence for a neural substrate of morphological rule application in correct wordforms.

Authors:  Andrea Krott; Riadh Lebib
Journal:  Brain Res       Date:  2012-12-14       Impact factor: 3.252

6.  Different neurophysiological mechanisms underlying word and rule extraction from speech.

Authors:  Ruth De Diego Balaguer; Juan Manuel Toro; Antoni Rodriguez-Fornells; Anne-Catherine Bachoud-Lévi
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2007-11-14       Impact factor: 3.240

  6 in total

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