The work addresses the question whether morphemes play a role in lexical representation and processing. Three hypotheses can be entertained: (i) morphemes (or a particular morpheme like the root) might be needed to access a representation of the whole word, or (ii) be used to express morphological relatedness at a postaccess level, or (iii) be used to determine the meaning of the word. These hypotheses are tested against experimental data on inflectional, derivational and compound morphology. The emerging picture is of a lexical architecture with two parallel access routes: one making use of whole-word access representations and postaccess connections between morphosemantically related words and another one in which the meaning of the whole word is computed from its morphemes.
Reihe
Duisburg Papers on Research in Language and Culture
21
Sprache
Verlagsort
Frankfurt a.M.
Deutschland
Zielgruppe
Editions-Typ
Illustrationen
Maße
Höhe: 21 cm
Breite: 14.8 cm
Gewicht
ISBN-13
978-3-631-44251-7 (9783631442517)
Schweitzer Klassifikation
The Author: Dominiek Sandra was born in 1960 in Kortrijk (Belgium). He obtained his M.A. degree in Germanic Languages at the Catholic University of Leuven in 1982. After a specialization in psycholinguistics he obtained his Ph.D. degree at the University of Amsterdam in 1990. He works as a lecturer at the University of Antwerp, UFSIA (Belgium).
Contents: Polymorphemic words - Mental lexicon - Visual word recognition - Ways of lexically representing/processing morphology - Motivations for morphological involvement in the mental lexicon - Inflectional morphology - Derivational morphology - Evaluation of Taft & Forster's prefix stripping model - Compound words.