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How large are root and affix priming effects in visual word recognition? Estimation from original data and a Bayesian meta-analysis

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posted on 2024-07-27, 11:40 authored by Jeonghwa Cho, Acrisio Pires, Jonathan R. Brennan

Priming effects for morphological roots support theories that grant them a unique representational status in visual word recognition. However, effects for other morphemes, including inflectional affixes, have been inconsistent. In a large-N experiment, we test the reliability of inflectional affix priming and add a meta-analysis to quantify priming effect size for roots and affixes. Study 1 probes priming for the English past tense suffix –ed at short (34 ms) and long (150 ms) stimulus-onset asynchrony; pure morphological priming is not obtained that is statistically distinguishable from form-based priming effects. A Bayesian meta-analysis (Study 2) demonstrates priming for roots and prefixes, but not suffixes, that are statistically larger than form-based priming effects. Taken together the absence of suffix priming contrasts with robust root and prefix effects, which may reflect the left-to-right nature of visual word recognition in the languages studied in this work.

Funding

This research was funded by the Department of Linguistics at the University of Michigan. A part of this article is based on data published in Cho and Brennan (2022). We thank the audience at the 44th Annual Meeting of the Cognitive Science Society. We have no known conflict of interest to disclose. Data and analysis codes are available at https://osf.io/sq8r4. This study was not preregistered.

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