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. 2016 Jun;45(3):575-97.
doi: 10.1007/s10936-015-9349-3.

Morphological Decomposition in Japanese De-adjectival Nominals: Masked and Overt Priming Evidence

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Morphological Decomposition in Japanese De-adjectival Nominals: Masked and Overt Priming Evidence

Robert Fiorentino et al. J Psycholinguist Res. 2016 Jun.

Abstract

Whether morpheme-based processing extends to relatively unproductive derived words remains a matter of debate. Although whole-word storage and access has been proposed for some derived words, such as Japanese de-adjectival nominals with the unproductive (-mi) suffix (e.g., Hagiwara et al. in Language 75:739-763, 1999), Clahsen and Ikemoto (Ment Lex 7:147-182, 2012) found masked priming from de-adjectival nominals with productive (-sa) and unproductive (-mi) suffixes to their adjectivally-inflected base morpheme. Using masked and unmasked priming, we examine whether adjectivally-inflected base morpheme primes facilitate the processing of Japanese de-adjectival nominal targets with a productive or unproductive affix, including an orthographic-overlap condition and semantic relatedness measure that Clahsen and Ikemoto (2012) did not include. Our results replicate and extend Clahsen and Ikemoto (2012), revealing significant, statistically-equivalent morphological priming effects for -sa and -mi affixed targets, independent of orthographic and semantic relatednesss, suggesting that the processing of derived words with the unproductive -mi affix makes recourse to morpheme-level representations.

Keywords: Japanese; Masked priming; Morphology; Productivity.

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