2021
DOI: 10.1111/1467-9817.12340
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Morphological decomposition supports word recognition in primary school children learning to read: evidence from masked priming of German derived words

Abstract: Background: When reading a word, skilled adult readers automatically decompose the word into its separate morphemes by processing the word's morphoorthography. In children, however, it still remains unclear when and how they start to automatically decompose words into morphemes. Methods: To better understand how primary school children learn and integrate automatic morphological processes into their reading, we conducted a masked priming experiment with n = 218 first to fourth graders and a control group of 36… Show more

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Cited by 12 publications
(9 citation statements)
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“…Morphological awareness predicted word reading and spelling after controlling for nonverbal cognitive abilities, age/grade, phoneme awareness and sublexical orthographic sensitivity. As described previously, Fleischhauer et al (2021) demonstrated a developmental progression in morpho-orthographic sensitivity that seemed to emerge earlier than has been shown in previous research in other languages (such as English). This suggests that the rich morpho-orthographic structure of German might contribute to earlier development of morpho-orthographic sensitivity during visual word recognition compared with more impoverished languages.…”
Section: Cross-language Considerationssupporting
confidence: 64%
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“…Morphological awareness predicted word reading and spelling after controlling for nonverbal cognitive abilities, age/grade, phoneme awareness and sublexical orthographic sensitivity. As described previously, Fleischhauer et al (2021) demonstrated a developmental progression in morpho-orthographic sensitivity that seemed to emerge earlier than has been shown in previous research in other languages (such as English). This suggests that the rich morpho-orthographic structure of German might contribute to earlier development of morpho-orthographic sensitivity during visual word recognition compared with more impoverished languages.…”
Section: Cross-language Considerationssupporting
confidence: 64%
“…Several studies in this special issue highlight the importance of morphology throughout development and also begin to illustrate developmental changes. For example, Fleischhauer et al (2021) demonstrated developmental progression in the nature of morphological processing during word recognition in a masked primed lexical decision task.…”
Section: Developmental Changes and Interventionsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…The present study extends the previous findings in a morphologically rich and moderately phonologically transparent language, Dutch. Given the morphological richness of the language, children learning to read in Dutch may be more likely to develop visual morphological processing to support lexical access during the early stages of reading development (Fleischhauer, Bruns, & Grosche, 2021). However, the transparency of the Dutch orthography, which makes phoneme‐grapheme conversions more reliable than languages such as English, may result in a reduced reliance on the use of morphemes to support early reading efficiency.…”
Section: Present Studymentioning
confidence: 99%