2013
DOI: 10.1017/s0305000913000494
|View full text |Cite
|
Sign up to set email alerts
|

Morphological priming in child German

Abstract: Regular and irregular inflection in children's production has been examined in many previous studies. Yet, little is known about the processes involved in children's recognition of inflected words. To gain insight into how children process inflected words, the current study examines regular -t and irregular -n participles of German using the cross-modal priming technique testing 108 monolingual German-speaking children in two age groups (group I, mean age: 8;4, group II, mean age: 9;9) and a control group of 7… Show more

Help me understand this report

Search citation statements

Order By: Relevance

Paper Sections

Select...
2
1
1
1

Citation Types

2
7
0
1

Year Published

2015
2015
2022
2022

Publication Types

Select...
5
2

Relationship

0
7

Authors

Journals

citations
Cited by 14 publications
(14 citation statements)
references
References 51 publications
(78 reference statements)
2
7
0
1
Order By: Relevance
“…This is a disadvantage when one of the goals of the experiment is to test for a potential phonological basis to word pattern priming. Thirdly, the use of cross-modal priming maintains continuity with previous work on languages like English, Italian, and German that has used the same task (e.g., Clahsen & Fleischhauer, 2014 ; Marslen-Wilson et al, 1994 ; Orsolini & Marslen-Wilson, 1997 ; Sonnenstuhl, Eisenbeiss, & Clahsen, 1999 ).…”
Section: Arabic In Contextsupporting
confidence: 53%
“…This is a disadvantage when one of the goals of the experiment is to test for a potential phonological basis to word pattern priming. Thirdly, the use of cross-modal priming maintains continuity with previous work on languages like English, Italian, and German that has used the same task (e.g., Clahsen & Fleischhauer, 2014 ; Marslen-Wilson et al, 1994 ; Orsolini & Marslen-Wilson, 1997 ; Sonnenstuhl, Eisenbeiss, & Clahsen, 1999 ).…”
Section: Arabic In Contextsupporting
confidence: 53%
“…In addition, we manipulated grade level to track the developmental trajectory of morphological processing across grades 3 and 5 when children are learning a great deal about derivational forms (Anglin, 1993;Nagy, Winsor, Osborn, & O'Flahavan, 1994). This age range is also at the lower end of existing data on use of this method with children (e.g., Clahsen & Fleischhauer, 2014).…”
Section: The Present Studymentioning
confidence: 89%
“…Most of the priming studies conducted in children used visual primes and targets. To our knowledge, only one study indicated that morphological priming is not specific to the visual modality in children: Clahsen and Fleischhauer () showed that 8‐ and 9‐year‐old German‐speaking children benefit from auditory primes to process visual targets that are morphologically related (e.g., gedruckt ‐ drucke ). Our study reinforces this result and extends it to the processing of derivational morphology: The presentation of a morphologically complex auditory prime facilitates subsequent root processing in third and fifth graders, indicating that the processing of morphological information is “modality‐independent”.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 2 more Smart Citations