1st Edition

Morphological Aspects of Language Processing

Edited By Laurie Beth Feldman Copyright 1995
    430 Pages
    by Psychology Press

    430 Pages
    by Psychology Press

    It is now well established that phonological -- and orthographic -- codes play a crucial role in the recognition of isolated words and in understanding the sequences of words that comprise a sentence. However, words and sentences are organized with respect to morphological as well as phonological components. It is thus unfortunate that the morpheme has received relatively little attention in the experimental literature, either from psychologists or linguists. Due to recent methodological developments, however, now is an opportune time to address morphological issues.

    In the experimental literature, there is a tendency to examine various psycholinguistic processes in English and then to assume that the account given applies with equal significance to English and to other languages. Written languages differ, however, in the extent to which they capture phonological as contrasted with morphological units. Moreover, with respect to the morpheme, languages differ in the principle by which morphemes are connected to form new words.

    This volume focuses on morphological processes in word recognition and reading with an eye toward comparing morphological processes with orthographic and phonological processes. Cross-language comparisons are examined as a tool with which to probe universal linguistic processes, and a variety of research methodologies are described. Because it makes the experimental literature in languages other than English more accessible, this book is expected to be of interest to many readers. It also directs attention to the subject of language processing in general -- an issue which is of central interest to cognitive psychologists and linguists as well as educators and clinicians.

    Contents: C.A. Fowler, Introduction. Part I:Visual and Orthographic Issues in Morphological Processing. B.L. Derwing, M.L. Smith, G.E. Wiebe, On the Role of Spelling in Morpheme Recognition: Experimental Studies with Children and Adults. K. Emmorey, Processing the Dynamic Visual-Spatial Morphology of Signed Languages. D. Chialant, A. Caramazza, Where Is Morphology and How Is It Processed? The Case of Written Word Recognition. Part II:Semantic Issues in Morphological Processing. L. Katz, K. Rexer, M. Peter, Case Morphology and Thematic Role in Word Recognition. J.A. Stolz, L.B. Feldman, The Role of Orthographic and Semantic Transparency of the Base Morpheme in Morphological Processing. R. Schreuder, R.H. Baayen, Modeling Morphological Processing. Part III:Phonological Issues in Morphological Processing. A.E. Fowler, I.Y. Liberman, The Role of Phonology and Orthography in Morphological Awareness. J.F. Carlisle, Morphological Awareness and Early Reading Achievement. V.L. Hanson, Linguistic Influences on the Spelling of ASL/English Bilinguals. J. Bybee, Diachronic and Typological Properties of Morphology and Their Implications for Representation. J.P. Stemberger, Phonological and Lexical Constraints on Morphological Processing. Part IV:Structural and Statistical Issues in Morphological Processing. S. Bentin, R. Frost, Morphological Factors in Visual Word Identification in Hebrew. M. Taft, X. Zhu, The Representation of Bound Morphemes in the Lexicon: A Chinese Study. A. Kostic, Information Load Constraints on Processing Inflected Morphology. A. Laudanna, C. Burani, Distributional Properties of Derivational Affixes: Implications for Processing. P.T. Smith, Are Morphemes Really Necessary? P.T.W. Hudson, D. Buijs, Left-to-Right Processing of Derivational Morphology.

    Biography

    Laurie Beth Feldman