Distinct morphological processing of recently learned compound words: An ERP study

Our vocabulary is, at least in principle, infinite. We can create new words combining existing ones in meaningful ways to form new linguistic expressions. The present study investigated the morphological processing of novel compound words in overt speech production. Native speakers of Dutch learned...

Descripción completa

Guardado en:
Detalles Bibliográficos
Autor principal: Kaczer, L.
Otros Autores: Timmer, K., Bavassi, L., Schiller, N.O
Formato: Capítulo de libro
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: Elsevier 2015
Acceso en línea:Registro en Scopus
DOI
Handle
Registro en la Biblioteca Digital
Aporte de:Registro referencial: Solicitar el recurso aquí
LEADER 13118caa a22013337a 4500
001 PAPER-13085
003 AR-BaUEN
005 20230518204320.0
008 190411s2015 xx ||||fo|||| 00| 0 eng|d
024 7 |2 scopus  |a 2-s2.0-84955508448 
040 |a Scopus  |b spa  |c AR-BaUEN  |d AR-BaUEN 
030 |a BRREA 
100 1 |a Kaczer, L. 
245 1 0 |a Distinct morphological processing of recently learned compound words: An ERP study 
260 |b Elsevier  |c 2015 
270 1 0 |m Kaczer, L.; Laboratorio de Neurobiología de la Memoria, Departamento de Fisiología, Biología Molecular y Celular, Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales, Universidad de Buenos Aires, IFIBYNE - CONICETArgentina; email: laurakaczer@gmail.com 
506 |2 openaire  |e Política editorial 
504 |a Aranoff, M., Fudeman, K., (2005) What Is Morphology?, , Blackwell Oxford 
504 |a Baayen, R.H., Renouf, A., Chronicling the times: Productive lexical innovations in an English newspaper (1996) Language, 72, pp. 69-96 
504 |a Baayen, R.H., Dijkstra, T., Schreuder, R., Singulars and plurals in Dutch: Evidence for a parallel dual route model (1997) J. Mem. Lang., 37, pp. 94-117 
504 |a Badecker, W., Lexical composition and the production of compounds: Evidence from errors in naming (2001) Lang. Cogn. Process., 16, pp. 337-366 
504 |a Blackford, T., Holcomb, P.J., Grainger, J., Kuperberg, G.R., A funny thing happened on the way to articulation: N400 attenuation despite behavioral interference in picture naming (2012) Cognition, 123, pp. 84-99 
504 |a Borovsky, A., Kutas, M., Elman, J., Learning to use words: Event-related potentials index single-shot contextual word learning (2010) Cognition, 116, pp. 289-296 
504 |a Bowers, J.S., Davis, C.J., Hanley, D.A., Interfering neighbours: The impact of novel word learning on the identification of visually similar words (2005) Cognition, 97, pp. 45-54 
504 |a Butterworth, B., Lexical representation (1983) Language Production, 2, pp. 257-294. , B. Butterworth, Academic Press London 
504 |a Caramazza, A., Laudanna, A., Romani, C., Lexical access and inflectional morphology (1988) Cognition, 28, pp. 297-332 
504 |a Chauncey, K., Holcomb, P.J., Grainger, J., Primed picture naming within and across languages: An ERP investigation (2009) Cogn. Affect. Behav. Neurosci., 9, pp. 286-303 
504 |a Cohen-Goldberg, A.M., Towards a theory of multimorphemic word production: The heterogeneity of processing hypothesis (2013) Lang. Cogn. Process., 28, pp. 1036-1064 
504 |a Delorme, A., Makeig, S., EEGLAB: An open source toolbox for analysis of single-trial EEG dynamics including independent component analysis (2004) J. Neurosci. Methods, 134, pp. 9-21 
504 |a De Vaan, L., Ernestus, M., Schreuder, R., The lifespan of lexical traces for novel morphologically complex words (2011) Men. Lexicon, 6, pp. 374-392 
504 |a De Vaan, L., Schreuder, R., Baayen, R.H., Regular morphologically complex neologisms leave detectable traces in the mental lexicon (2007) Men. Lexicon, 2, pp. 1-23 
504 |a Dohmes, P., Zwitserlood, P., Bölte, J., The impact of semantic transparency of morphologically complex words on picture naming (2004) Brain Lang., 90, pp. 203-212 
504 |a Dumay, N., Gaskell, M.G., Sleep-associated changes in the mental representation of spoken words (2007) Psychol. Sci., 18, pp. 35-39 
504 |a Ganis, G., Kutas, M., Sereno, M.I.J., The search for «common sense»: An electrophysiological study of the comprehension of words and pictures in reading (1996) Cogn. Neurosci., 8, pp. 89-106 
504 |a Ganushchak, L.Y., Christoffels, I.K., Schiller, N.O., The use of electroencephalography in language production research: A review (2011) Front. Psychol., 2, p. 208 
504 |a Gaskell, M.G., Dumay, N., Lexical competition and the acquisition of novel words (2003) Cognition, 89, pp. 105-132 
504 |a Hauser, M.D., Chomsky, N., Fitch, W.T., The faculty of language: What is it, who has it, and how did it evolve? (2002) Science, 298, pp. 1569-1579 
504 |a Indefrey, P., Levelt, W.J.M., The spatial and temporal signatures of word production components (2004) Cognition, 92, pp. 101-144 
504 |a Isel, F., Gunter, T.C., Friederici, A.D., Prosody-assisted head-driven access to spoken German compounds (2003) J. Exp. Psychol. Learn. Mem. Cogn., 29 (2), pp. 277-288 
504 |a Koester, D., Schiller, N.O., Morphological priming in overt language production: Electrophysiological evidence from Dutch (2008) Neuroimage, 42, pp. 1622-1630 
504 |a Koester, D., Schiller, N.O., The functional neuroanatomy of morphology in language production (2011) Neuroimage, 55, pp. 732-741 
504 |a Kutas, M., Federmeier, K.D., Thirty years and counting: Finding meaning in the N400 component of the event-related brain potential (ERP) (2011) Annu. Rev. Psychol., 62, pp. 621-647 
504 |a Leach, L., Samuel, A.G., Lexical configuration and lexical engagement: When adults learn new words (2007) Cogn. Psychol., 55, pp. 306-353 
504 |a Levelt, W.J., Spoken word production: A theory of lexical access (2001) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA, 98, pp. 13464-13471 
504 |a Levelt, W.J., Roelofs, A., Meyer, A.S., A theory of lexical access in speech production (1999) Behav. Brain Sci., 22, pp. 1-75 
504 |a Lensink, S.E., Verdonschot, R.G., Schiller, N.O., Morphological priming during language switching: An ERP study (2014) Front. Hum. Neurosci., 8, p. 995 
504 |a Libben, G., Derwing, B.L., De Almeida, R.G., Ambiguous novel compounds and models of morphological parsing (1999) Brain Lang., 68, pp. 378-386 
504 |a McClelland, J.L., McNaughton, B.L., O'Reilly, R.C., Why there are complementary learning systems in the hippocampus and neocortex: Insights from the successes and failures of connectionist models of learning and memory (1995) Psychol. Rev., 102, pp. 419-457 
504 |a McKinnon, R., Allen, M., Osterhout, L., Morphological decomposition involving non-productive morphemes: ERP evidence (2003) Neuroreport, 14, pp. 883-886 
504 |a Mestres-Misse, A., Rodriguez-Fornells, A., Münte, T.F., Watching the brain during meaning acquisition (2007) Cereb. Cortex, 17, pp. 1858-1866 
504 |a Nation, I.S.P., Vocabulary size, text coverage, and word lists (1997) Vocabulary: Description, Acquisition and Pedagogy, , S. McCarthy, Cambridge University Press Cambridge 
504 |a Piai, V., Riès, S.K., Knight, R.T., The electrophysiology of language production: What could be improved (2015) Front. Psychol., 5, p. 5160 
504 |a Pinker, S., Jackendoff, R., The faculty of language: What's special about it? (2005) Cognition, 95, pp. 201-236 
504 |a Plaut, D.C., Gonnerman, L.M., Are non-semantic morphological effects incompatible with a distributed connectionist approach to lexical processing? (2000) Lang. Cogn. Process., 15, pp. 445-485 
504 |a Qiao, X., Forster, K.I., Novel word lexicalization and the prime lexicality effect (2013) J. Exp. Psychol. Learn. Mem. Cogn., 39, pp. 1064-1074 
504 |a Roelofs, A., Serial order in planning the production of successive morphemes of a word (1996) J. Mem. Lang., 35, pp. 854-876 
504 |a Roelofs, A., Spoken language planning and the initiation of articulation (2002) Q. J. Exp. Psychol. A, 55, pp. 465-483 
504 |a Rosenthal, R., Rosnow, R., (1985) Contrast Analysis Focused Comparisons in the Analysis of Variance, , Cambridge University Press Cambridge, UK 
504 |a Sahin, N.T., Pinker, S., Cash, S.S., Schomer, D., Halgren, E., Sequential processing of lexical, grammatical, and phonological information within Broca's area (2009) Science, 326, pp. 445-449 
504 |a Schiller, N.O., Verdonschot, R.G., Accessing words from the mental lexicon (2014) The Oxford Handbook of the Word, , J.R. Taylor, Oxford University Press Oxford 
504 |a Seidenberg, M.S., McClelland, J.L., A distributed, developmental model of word recognition and naming (1989) Psychol. Rev., 96, pp. 523-568 
504 |a Taft, M., Morphological decomposition and the reverse base frequency effect (2004) Q. J. Exp. Psychol., 57 A, pp. 745-765 
504 |a Taft, M., Forster, K.I., Lexical storage and retrieval of prefixed words (1975) J. Verbal Learn. Verbal Behav., 14, pp. 638-647 
504 |a Takashima, A., Bakker, I., Van Hell, J.G., Janzen, G., McQueen, J.M., Richness of information about novel words influences how episodic and semantic memory networks interact during lexicalization (2014) Neuroimage, 84, pp. 265-278 
504 |a Verdonschot, R.G., Middelburg, R., Lensink, S.E., Schiller, N.O., Morphological priming survives a language switch (2012) Cognition, 124, pp. 343-349 
504 |a Zwitserlood, P., Bölte, J., Dohmes, P., Morphological effects on speech production: Evidence from picture naming (2000) Lang. Cogn. Process., 15, pp. 563-591 
504 |a Zwitserlood, P., Bölte, J., Dohmes, P., Where and how morphologically complex words interplay with naming pictures (2002) Brain Lang., 81, pp. 358-367 
520 3 |a Our vocabulary is, at least in principle, infinite. We can create new words combining existing ones in meaningful ways to form new linguistic expressions. The present study investigated the morphological processing of novel compound words in overt speech production. Native speakers of Dutch learned a series of new compounds (e.g. appelgezicht, 'apple-face') that were later used as primes in a morphological priming task. In this protocol, primes were compound words morphologically related to a target's picture name (e.g. appelgezicht was used for a picture of an apple, Dutch appel). The novel primes were compared with corresponding familiar compounds sharing a free morpheme (e.g. appelmoes, 'applesauce') and with unrelated compounds. Participants were required to read aloud words and to name pictures in a long-lag design. Behavioral and event-related potentials (ERPs) data were collected in two sessions, separated by 48 h. Clear facilitation of picture naming latencies was obtained when pictures were paired with morphological related words. Notably, our results show that novel compounds have a stronger priming effect than familiar compounds in both sessions, which is expressed in a marked reduction in target naming latencies and a decrease in the N400 amplitude. These results suggest that participants focused more on the separate constituents when reading novel primes than in the case of existing compounds. © 2015 Elsevier B.V.  |l eng 
536 |a Detalles de la financiación: Laura Kaczer acknowledges the support of the Coimbra fellowship during her stay as a visiting researcher in Leiden University . Appendix 
593 |a Laboratorio de Neurobiología de la Memoria, Departamento de Fisiología, Biología Molecular y Celular, Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales, Universidad de Buenos Aires, IFIBYNE - CONICET, Buenos Aires, 1428, Argentina 
593 |a Leiden Institute for Brain and Cognition, Leiden University, Leiden, Netherlands 
593 |a Faculty of Humanities, Leiden University Centre for Linguistics, Leiden University, Leiden, Netherlands 
593 |a Departamento de Física, Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales, Universidad de Buenos Aires, Argentina 
690 1 0 |a EEG 
690 1 0 |a MORPHOLOGY 
690 1 0 |a N400 
690 1 0 |a OVERT SPEECH 
690 1 0 |a PRIMING 
690 1 0 |a WORD LEARNING 
690 1 0 |a ADULT 
690 1 0 |a ELECTROENCEPHALOGRAPHY 
690 1 0 |a EVOKED RESPONSE 
690 1 0 |a FEMALE 
690 1 0 |a HUMAN 
690 1 0 |a LEARNING 
690 1 0 |a LINGUISTICS 
690 1 0 |a MALE 
690 1 0 |a PHOTOSTIMULATION 
690 1 0 |a PHYSIOLOGY 
690 1 0 |a PROCEDURES 
690 1 0 |a REACTION TIME 
690 1 0 |a YOUNG ADULT 
690 1 0 |a ADULT 
690 1 0 |a ELECTROENCEPHALOGRAPHY 
690 1 0 |a EVOKED POTENTIALS 
690 1 0 |a FEMALE 
690 1 0 |a HUMANS 
690 1 0 |a LEARNING 
690 1 0 |a MALE 
690 1 0 |a PHOTIC STIMULATION 
690 1 0 |a REACTION TIME 
690 1 0 |a VOCABULARY 
690 1 0 |a YOUNG ADULT 
700 1 |a Timmer, K. 
700 1 |a Bavassi, L. 
700 1 |a Schiller, N.O. 
773 0 |d Elsevier, 2015  |g v. 1629  |h pp. 309-317  |p Brain Res.  |x 00068993  |w (AR-BaUEN)CENRE-4052  |t Brain Research 
856 4 1 |u https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84955508448&doi=10.1016%2fj.brainres.2015.10.029&partnerID=40&md5=17da683ce98f3202c08b896af972f264  |y Registro en Scopus 
856 4 0 |u https://doi.org/10.1016/j.brainres.2015.10.029  |y DOI 
856 4 0 |u https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_00068993_v1629_n_p309_Kaczer  |y Handle 
856 4 0 |u https://bibliotecadigital.exactas.uba.ar/collection/paper/document/paper_00068993_v1629_n_p309_Kaczer  |y Registro en la Biblioteca Digital 
961 |a paper_00068993_v1629_n_p309_Kaczer  |b paper  |c PE 
962 |a info:eu-repo/semantics/article  |a info:ar-repo/semantics/artículo  |b info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion 
999 |c 74038