A1 Vertaisarvioitu alkuperäisartikkeli tieteellisessä lehdessä

Long-lag morphological priming and inflectional paradigm size effects in Estonian and Finnish text reading




TekijätLõo, Kaidi; Bertram, Raymond; Kuperman, Victor

KustantajaJohn Benjamins Publishing Company

KustannuspaikkaAMSTERDAM

Julkaisuvuosi2024

JournalMental Lexicon

Tietokannassa oleva lehden nimiThe Mental Lexicon

Lehden akronyymiMENT LEX

Vuosikerta19

Numero2

Aloitussivu253

Lopetussivu284

Sivujen määrä32

ISSN1871-1340

eISSN1871-1375

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1075/ml.24035.loo

Verkko-osoitehttps://doi.org/10.1075/ml.24035.loo


Tiivistelmä
Morphological priming and paradigm size effects have been established in single word reading studies, however, morphological priming effects in longer texts have not been observed, and, to the best of our knowledge, paradigmatic effects in text reading have not yet been examined. The current study utilized the Multilingual Eye-Tracking Corpus MECO (Siegelman et al., 2022) to explore paradigmatic and morphological priming effects during text reading in Estonian and Finnish, two morphologically rich Finno-Ugric languages. The results showed clear inflectional paradigm size effects for Estonian during text reading in several eye movement measures, but not for Finnish. This may be linked to the support from the inflectional paradigm being semantically more beneficial to the reader in Estonian than in Finnish. The current study also showed clear long-lag inflectional priming effects in text reading, unlike what was observed in prior studies in Dutch, English, and Spanish. This study is thus the first to show that inflectional priming can extend beyond word or sentence level and suggest that inflectional variants of a particular word in Estonian and Finnish get and remain activated even when text context is present.


Julkaisussa olevat rahoitustiedot
This research was funded by Estonian Research Council grant number PSG743 (L & otilde;o, PI), the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada Partnered Research Training Grant ,895-2016-1 008, ( Libben, PI), the Insight Grant 435-2021-0657(Kuperman, PI), and the Canada Research Chair (Tier 2; Kuperman, PI).


Last updated on 2025-01-09 at 14:50