“…For instance, morphology plays a beneficial role in reading acquisition (e.g., D'Alessio, Jaichenco, & Deacon & Francis, 2017), vocabulary learning (Sparks & Deacon, 2015), spelling (Sánchez-Gutiérrez, 2013) and reading comprehension in children (Deacon, Kieffer, & Laroche, 2014). Morphology has also been shown to continue to benefit word processing (i.e., word reading and word recognition) in children with dyslexia who have not yet mastered whole-word processing (e.g., Marcolini, Traficante, Zoccolotti, & Burani, 2011;Suárez-Coalla, Martínez-García, & Cuetos, 2017) and it is related to higher levels of linguistic proficiency in learners of second/foreign languages (Sánchez-Gutiérrez & Hernández-Muñoz, 2018). Also, neurological patients with semantic deficits such as those presenting with the semantic variant of primary progressive aphasia show difficulties in the comprehension and production of morphologically complex words (Auclair-Ouellet, Fossard, Houde, Laforce, & Macoir, 2016;Auclair-Ouellet, Fossard, Laforce, Bier, & Macoir, 2017).…”