Journal Article10.1017/S1366728914000200
Morphological decomposition in native and non-native French speakers*
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TL;DR: This article investigated whether late second/foreign language learners can rely on mechanisms similar to those of native speakers for processing morphologically complex words, and they concluded that L2 learners have access to similar mechanisms to the ones of native learners for processing complex words.
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Abstract: This study investigates whether late second/foreign language (L2) learners can rely on mechanisms similar to those of native speakers for processing morphologically complex words. Specifically, it examines whether native English speakers who have begun learning French around the onset of puberty can decompose -er (Class I) French verbs. Mid-to-high-proficiency L2 learners and native French speakers completed a masked-priming word-naming task. Latencies for morphologically related, orthographically related, and semantically related prime–target combinations were compared to latencies for identical and unrelated prime–target combinations. The results reveal the following effects: full morphological priming for both native and non-native speakers, with this effect increasing with French proficiency for L2 learners; partial orthographic priming for both groups; greater priming in the morphological condition than in the orthographic condition for both groups; and no semantic priming for either group. We conclude that L2 learners have access to similar mechanisms to those of native speakers for processing morphologically complex words.
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Citations
Chapter 10. Cross-language influences on morphological processing in bilinguals
15 Apr 2023
TL;DR: The authors provide a review of studies examining the processing of affixed and compound words in bilinguals, with a particular focus on studies directly targeting cross-language transfer, and support the idea that bilinguals rapidly and simultaneously activate the morphological features in both of their languages during the early, automatic stages of visual word recognition.
Morphological priming in bilingualism research
TL;DR: The authors describes how morphological priming can be used to study the processing of morphologically complex words in bilinguals and discusses a number of basic methodological pitfalls with regard to experimental design and materials.
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