Morphological and visual cues in compound word reading: Eye-tracking evidence from Hebrew

Volume: 73, Issue: 12, Pages: 2177 - 2187
Published: Jul 20, 2020
Abstract
Hebrew noun–noun compounds offer a valuable opportunity to study the long-standing question of how morphologically complex words are processed during reading. Specifically, in some morpho-syntactic environments, the first (head) noun of a compound carries a suffix—a clear orthographic marker of being part of a compound—whereas in others it is homographic with a stand-alone noun. In addition to this morphological cue, Hebrew occasionally employs...
Paper Details
Title
Morphological and visual cues in compound word reading: Eye-tracking evidence from Hebrew
Published Date
Jul 20, 2020
Volume
73
Issue
12
Pages
2177 - 2187
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