115 results on '"Crepaldi, Davide"'
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2. Readers target words where they expect to minimize uncertainty
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Carr, Jon W., Fantini, Monica, Perrotti, Lorena, and Crepaldi, Davide
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- 2024
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3. Prediction at the intersection of sentence context and word form: Evidence from eye-movements and self-paced reading
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Amenta, Simona, Hasenäcker, Jana, Crepaldi, Davide, and Marelli, Marco
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- 2023
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4. Lexical Access Speed and the Development of Phonological Recoding during Immediate Serial Recall
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AuBuchon, Angela M., Elliott, Emily M., Morey, Candice C., Jarrold, Christopher, Cowan, Nelson, Adams, Eryn J., Attwood, Meg, Bayram, Büsra, Blakstvedt, Taran Y., Büttner, Gerhard, Castelain, Thomas, Cave, Shari, Crepaldi, Davide, Fredriksen, Eivor, Glass, Bret A., Guitard, Dominic, Hoehl, Stefanie, Hosch, Alexis, Jeanneret, Stéphanie, Joseph, Tanya N., Koch, Christopher, Lelonkiewicz, Jaroslaw R., Meissner, Grace, Mendenhall, Whitney, Moreau, David, Ostermann, Thomas, Özdogru, Asil Ali, Padovani, Francesca, Poloczek, Sebastian, Röer, Jan Philipp, Schonberg, Christina, Tamnes, Christian K., Tomasik, Martin J., Valentini, Beatrice, Vergauwe, Evie, Vlach, Haley, and Voracek, Martin
- Abstract
A recent Registered Replication Report (RRR) of the development of verbal rehearsal during serial recall revealed that children verbalized at younger ages than previously thought, but did not identify sources of individual differences. Here, we use mediation analysis to reanalyze data from the 934 children ranging from 5 to 10 years old from the RRR for that purpose. From ages 5 to 7, the time taken for a child to label pictures (i.e. isolated naming speed) predicted the child's spontaneous use of labels during a visually presented serial reconstruction task, despite no need for spoken responses. For 6- and 7-year-olds, isolated naming speed also predicted recall. The degree to which verbalization mediated the relation between isolated naming speed and recall changed across development. All relations dissipated by age 10. The same general pattern was observed in an exploratory analysis of delayed recall for which greater demands are placed on rehearsal for item maintenance. Overall, our findings suggest that spontaneous phonological recoding during a standard short-term memory task emerges around age 5, increases in efficiency during the early elementary school years, and is sufficiently automatic by age 10 to support immediate serial recall in most children. Moreover, the findings highlight the need to distinguish between phonological recoding and rehearsal in developmental studies of short-term memory.
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- 2022
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5. Spatiotemporal dynamics of abstract and concrete semantic representations
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Vignali, Lorenzo, Xu, Yangwen, Turini, Jacopo, Collignon, Olivier, Crepaldi, Davide, and Bottini, Roberto
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- 2023
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6. Morphemes as letter chunks: Linguistic information enhances the learning of visual regularities
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Lelonkiewicz, Jarosław R., Ktori, Maria, and Crepaldi, Davide
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- 2023
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7. Letter chunk frequency does not explain morphological masked priming: Affix frequency in masked priming
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De Rosa, Mara and Crepaldi, Davide
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- 2022
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8. Frequency-based neural discrimination in fast periodic visual stimulation
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De Rosa, Mara, Ktori, Maria, Vidal, Yamil, Bottini, Roberto, and Crepaldi, Davide
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- 2022
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9. Orthographic Consistency Influences Morphological Processing in Reading Aloud: Evidence from a Cross-Linguistic Study
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Mousikou, Petroula, Beyersmann, Elisabeth, Ktori, Maria, Javourey-Drevet, Ludivine, Crepaldi, Davide, Ziegler, Johannes C., Grainger, Jonathan, and Schroeder, Sascha
- Abstract
The present study investigated whether morphological processing in reading is influenced by the orthographic consistency of a language or its morphological complexity. Developing readers in Grade 3 and skilled adult readers participated in a reading aloud task in four alphabetic orthographies (English, French, German, Italian), which differ in terms of both orthographic consistency and morphological complexity. English is the least consistent, in terms of its spelling-to-sound relationships, as well as the most morphologically sparse, compared to the other three. Two opposing hypotheses were formulated. If orthographic consistency modulated the use of morphology in reading, readers of English should show more robust morphological processing than readers of the other three languages, because morphological units increase the reliability of spelling-to-sound mappings in the English language. In contrast, if the use of morphology in reading depended on the morphological complexity of a language, readers of French, German, and Italian should process morphological units in printed letter strings more efficiently than readers of English. Both developing and skilled readers of English showed greater morphological processing than readers of the other three languages. These results support the idea that the orthographic consistency of a language, rather than its morphological complexity, influences the extent to which morphology is used during reading. We explain our findings within the remit of extant theories of reading acquisition and outline their theoretical and educational implications.
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- 2020
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10. Algorithms for the automated correction of vertical drift in eye-tracking data
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Carr, Jon W., Pescuma, Valentina N., Furlan, Michele, Ktori, Maria, and Crepaldi, Davide
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- 2022
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11. Does morphological structure modulate access to embedded word meaning in child readers?
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Hasenäcker, Jana, Solaja, Olga, and Crepaldi, Davide
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- 2021
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12. Morphemes as letter chunks: Discovering affixes through visual regularities
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Lelonkiewicz, Jarosław R., Ktori, Maria, and Crepaldi, Davide
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- 2020
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13. A new test of action verb naming: normative data from 290 Italian adults
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Papagno, Costanza, Casarotti, Alessandra, Zarino, Barbara, and Crepaldi, Davide
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- 2020
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14. Long-term follow-up of neuropsychological functions in patients with high grade gliomas: can cognitive status predict patient’s outcome after surgery?
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Zarino, Barbara, Di Cristofori, Andrea, Fornara, Giorgia Abete, Bertani, Giulio Andrea, Locatelli, Marco, Caroli, Manuela, Rampini, Paolo, Cogiamanian, Filippo, Crepaldi, Davide, and Carrabba, Giorgio
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- 2020
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15. Food in the corner and money in the cashews: Semantic activation of embedded stems in the presence or absence of a morphological structure
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Hasenäcker, Jana, Solaja, Olga, and Crepaldi, Davide
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- 2020
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16. Brain network reconfiguration for narrative and argumentative thought
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Xu, Yangwen, Vignali, Lorenzo, Collignon, Olivier, Crepaldi, Davide, and Bottini, Roberto
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- 2021
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17. Rethinking First Language–Second Language Similarities and Differences in English Proficiency: Insights From the ENglish Reading Online (ENRO) Project.
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Siegelman, Noam, Elgort, Irina, Brysbaert, Marc, Agrawal, Niket, Amenta, Simona, Arsenijević Mijalković, Jasmina, Chang, Christine S., Chernova, Daria, Chetail, Fabienne, Clarke, A. J. Benjamin, Content, Alain, Crepaldi, Davide, Davaabold, Nastag, Delgersuren, Shurentsetseg, Deutsch, Avital, Dibrova, Veronika, Drieghe, Denis, Filipović Đurđević, Dušica, Finch, Brittany, and Frost, Ram
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ENGLISH language ,LANGUAGE ability ,READING comprehension ,VOCABULARY ,ORTHOGRAPHY & spelling - Abstract
This article presents the ENglish Reading Online (ENRO) project that offers data on English reading and listening comprehension from 7,338 university‐level advanced learners and native speakers of English representing 19 countries. The database also includes estimates of reading rate and seven component skills of English, including vocabulary, spelling, and grammar, as well as rich demographic and language background data. We first demonstrate high reliability for ENRO tests and their convergent validity with existing meta‐analyses. We then provide a bird's‐eye view of first (L1) and second (L2) language comparisons and examine the relative role of various predictors of reading and listening comprehension and reading speed. Across analyses, we found substantially more overlap than differences between L1 and L2 speakers, suggesting that English reading proficiency is best considered across a continuum of skill, ability, and experiences spanning L1 and L2 speakers alike. We end by providing pointers for how researchers can mine ENRO data for future studies. A one‐page Accessible Summary of this article in non‐technical language is freely available in the Supporting Information online and at https://oasis‐database.org [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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18. The Fruitless Effort of Growing a Fruitless Tree: Early Morpho-Orthographic and Morpho-Semantic Effects in Sentence Reading
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Amenta, Simona, Marelli, Marco, and Crepaldi, Davide
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In this eye-tracking study, we investigated how semantics inform morphological analysis at the early stages of visual word identification in sentence reading. We exploited a feature of several derived Italian words, that is, that they can be read in a "morphologically transparent" way or in a "morphologically opaque" way according to the sentence context to which they belong. This way, each target word was embedded in a sentence eliciting either its transparent or opaque interpretation. We analyzed whether the effect of stem frequency changes according to whether the (very same) word is read as a genuine derivation (transparent context) versus as a pseudoderived word (opaque context). Analysis of the first fixation durations revealed a stem-word frequency effect in both opaque and transparent contexts, thus showing that stems were accessed whether or not they contributed to word meaning, that is, word decomposition is indeed blind to semantics. However, while the stem-word frequency effect was facilitatory in the transparent context, it was inhibitory in the opaque context, thus showing an early involvement of semantic representations. This pattern of data is revealed by words with short suffixes. These results indicate that derived and pseudoderived words are segmented into their constituent morphemes also in natural reading; however, this blind-to-semantics process activates morpheme representations that are semantically connoted.
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- 2015
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19. Seeing Stems Everywhere: Position-Independent Identification of Stem Morphemes
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Crepaldi, Davide, Rastle, Kathleen, Davis, Colin J., and Lupker, Stephen J.
- Abstract
There is broad consensus that printed complex words are identified on the basis of their constituent morphemes. This fact raises the issue of how the word identification system codes for morpheme position, hence allowing it to distinguish between words like "overhang" and "hangover", and to recognize that "preheat" is a word, whereas "heatpre" is not. Recent data have shown that suffixes are identified as morphemes only when they occur at the end of letter strings (Crepaldi, Rastle, & Davis, 2010, "Morphemes in Their Place: Evidence for Position-Specific Identification of Suffixes," "Memory & Cognition, 38", 312-321), which supports the general proposal that the word identification system is sensitive to morpheme positional constraints. This proposal leads to the prediction that the identification of free stems should occur in a position-independent fashion, given that free stems can occur anywhere within complex words (e.g., over"dress" and "dresser"). In Experiment 1, we show that the rejection time of transposed-constituent pseudocompounds (e.g., "moonhoney") is longer than that of matched control nonwords (e.g., "moonbasin"), suggesting that honey and "moon" are identified within "moonhoney", and that these morpheme representations activate the representation for the word "honeymoon". In Experiments 2 and 3, we demonstrate that the masked presentation of transposed-constituent pseudocompounds (e.g., "moonhoney") facilitates the identification of compound words ("honeymoon"). In contrast, monomorphemic control pairs do not produce a similar pattern (i.e., "rickmave" did not prime "maverick"), indicating that the effect for "moonhoney" pairs is genuinely morphological in nature. These results demonstrate that stem representations differ from affix representations in terms of their positional constraints, providing a challenge to all existing theories of morphological processing. (Contains 7 tables and 3 footnotes.)
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- 2013
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20. Eye-voice and finger-voice spans in adults' oral reading of connected texts: Implications for reading research and assessment.
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Nadalini, Andrea, Marzi, Claudia, Ferro, Marcello, Taxitari, Loukia, Lento, Alessandro, Crepaldi, Davide, and Pirrelli, Vito
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ORAL reading ,EYE movements ,PARALLEL processing ,SHORT-term memory ,ENGLISH language - Abstract
The present paper investigates the interaction between eye movements, voice articulation and the movements of the index finger dynamically pointing to a text line in oral finger-point reading of Italian. During finger-point reading, the finger appears to be ahead of the voice most of the times, by a margin that is significantly modulated by the distribution of phrasal and prosodic units in the reading text. Eye movements replicate the same effects on a different time scale. The eye is ahead of both voice and finger by a wide margin (confirming evidence observed for English and German sentence reading), while showing a tendency to re-synchronise with voice articulation at the right edge of strong prosodic units (sentence boundaries). Our evidence suggests a multicomponent view of the time span between the eye/finger and the voice. The span is shown to be the dynamic outcome of an optimally adaptive reading strategy, resulting from the interaction between individual decoding skills, the reader's phonological buffer capacity, and the structural complexity of a reading text. Proficient readers modulate their span to compensate for the different timing between word fixation and word articulation, read faster, and dynamically adjust their processing window to the meaningful, prosodic units of a text. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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21. Similar object shape representation encoded in the inferolateral occipitotemporal cortex of sighted and early blind people.
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Xu, Yangwen, Vignali, Lorenzo, Sigismondi, Federica, Crepaldi, Davide, Bottini, Roberto, and Collignon, Olivier
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PARIETAL lobe ,VISUAL pathways ,LARGE-scale brain networks ,PREMOTOR cortex ,MODULAR construction ,PHYSICAL contact ,PREHENSION (Physiology) - Abstract
We can sense an object's shape by vision or touch. Previous studies suggested that the inferolateral occipitotemporal cortex (ILOTC) implements supramodal shape representations as it responds more to seeing or touching objects than shapeless textures. However, such activation in the anterior portion of the ventral visual pathway could be due to the conceptual representation of an object or visual imagery triggered by touching an object. We addressed these possibilities by directly comparing shape and conceptual representations of objects in early blind (who lack visual experience/imagery) and sighted participants. We found that bilateral ILOTC in both groups showed stronger activation during a shape verification task than during a conceptual verification task made on the names of the same manmade objects. Moreover, the distributed activity in the ILOTC encoded shape similarity but not conceptual association among objects. Besides the ILOTC, we also found shape representation in both groups' bilateral ventral premotor cortices and intraparietal sulcus (IPS), a frontoparietal circuit relating to object grasping and haptic processing. In contrast, the conceptual verification task activated both groups' left perisylvian brain network relating to language processing and, interestingly, the cuneus in early blind participants only. The ILOTC had stronger functional connectivity to the frontoparietal circuit than to the left perisylvian network, forming a modular structure specialized in shape representation. Our results conclusively support that the ILOTC selectively implements shape representation independently of visual experience, and this unique functionality likely comes from its privileged connection to the frontoparietal haptic circuit. The study reveals that the inferolateral occipitotemporal cortex, with its privileged connections to the frontoparietal haptic circuit, selectively encodes object shape independently of visual experience. It also highlights the role of the left perisylvian language network in representing object functions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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22. A Place for Nouns and a Place for Verbs? A Critical Review of Neurocognitive Data on Grammatical-Class Effects
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Crepaldi, Davide, Berlingeri, Manuela, and Paulesu, Eraldo
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It is generally held that noun processing is specifically sub-served by temporal areas, while the neural underpinnings of verb processing are located in the frontal lobe. However, this view is now challenged by a significant body of evidence accumulated over the years. Moreover, the results obtained so far on the neural implementation of noun and verb processing appear to be quite inconsistent. The present review briefly describes and critically re-considers the anatomo-correlative, neuroimaging, MEG, TMS and cortical stimulation studies on nouns and verbs with the aim of assessing the consistency of their results, particularly within techniques. The paper also addresses the question as to whether the inconsistency of the data could be due to the variety of the tasks used. However, it emerged that neither the different investigation techniques used nor the different cognitive tasks employed fully explain the variability of the data. In the final section we thus suggest that the main reason for the emergence of inconsistent data in this field is that the cerebral circuits underlying noun and verb processing are not spatially segregated, at least for the spatial resolution currently used in most neuroimaging studies. (Contains 5 tables and 1 figure.)
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- 2011
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23. 'Fell' Primes 'Fall', but Does 'Bell' Prime 'Ball'? Masked Priming with Irregularly-Inflected Primes
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Crepaldi, Davide, Rastle, Kathleen, and Coltheart, Max
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Recent masked priming experiments have brought to light a morphological level of analysis that is exclusively based on the orthographic appearance of words, so that it breaks down corner into corn- and -er, as well as dealer into deal- and -er (Rastle, Davis, & New, 2004). Being insensitive to semantic factors, this morpho-orthographic segmentation process cannot capture the morphological relationship between irregularly inflected words and their base forms (e.g., fell-fall, bought-buy); hence, the prediction follows that these words should not facilitate each other in masked priming experiments. However, the first experiment described in the present work demonstrates that fell does facilitate fall more than orthographically matched (e.g., fill) and unrelated control words (e.g., hope). Experiments 2 and 3 also show that this effect cannot be explained through orthographic sub-regularities that characterize many irregular inflections, as no priming arose when unrelated words showing the same orthographic patterns were tested (e.g., tell-tall vs. toll-tall). These results highlight the existence of a second higher-level source of masked morphological priming; we propose that this second source of priming is located at the lemma level, where inflected words (but not derived words) share their representation irrespective of orthographic regularity. (Contains 4 tables and 2 figures.)
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- 2010
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24. Processing Differences Across Regular and Irregular Inflections Revealed Through ERPs
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Rastle, Kathleen, Lavric, Aureliu, Elchlepp, Heike, and Crepaldi, Davide
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- 2015
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25. Meaning is in the beholder’s eye: Morpho-semantic effects in masked priming
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Marelli, Marco, Amenta, Simona, Morone, Elena Angela, and Crepaldi, Davide
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- 2013
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26. Morphemes in their place: Evidence for position-specific identification of suffixes
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Crepaldi, Davide, Rastle, Kathleen, and Davis, Colin J.
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- 2010
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27. Automatic morpheme identification across development: Magnetoencephalography (MEG) evidence from fast periodic visual stimulation.
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Pescuma, Valentina N., Ktori, Maria, Beyersmann, Elisabeth, Sowman, Paul F., Castles, Anne, and Crepaldi, Davide
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AUTOMATIC identification ,MAGNETOENCEPHALOGRAPHY ,INDIGENOUS children ,WORD recognition ,SYSTEM identification ,OCCIPITAL bone - Abstract
The present study combined magnetoencephalography (MEG) recordings with fast periodic visual stimulation (FPVS) to investigate automatic neural responses to morphemes in developing and skilled readers. Native English-speaking children (N=17, grade 5-6) and adults (N=28) were presented with rapid streams of base stimuli (6Hz) interleaved periodically with oddballs (i.e., every fifth item, oddball stimulation frequency: 1.2Hz). In a manipulation-check condition, tapping into word recognition, oddballs featured familiar words (e.g., roll) embedded in a stream of consonant strings (e.g., ktlq). In the experimental conditions, the contrast between oddball and base stimuli was manipulated in order to probe selective stem and suffix identification in morphologically structured pseudowords (e.g., stem+suffix pseudowords such as softity embedded in nonstem+suffix pseudowords such as trumess). Neural responses at the oddball frequency and harmonics were analyzed at the sensor level using non-parametric cluster-based permutation tests. As expected, results in the manipulation-check condition revealed a word-selective response reflected by a predominantly left-lateralized cluster that emerged over temporal, parietal, and occipital sensors in both children and adults. However, across the experimental conditions, results yielded a differential pattern of oddball responses in developing and skilled readers. Children displayed a significant response that emerged in a mostly central occipital cluster for the condition tracking stem identification in the presence of suffixes (e.g., softity vs. trumess). In contrast, adult participants showed a significant response that emerged in a cluster located in central and left occipital sensors for the condition tracking suffix identification in the presence of stems (e.g., softity vs. stopust). The present results suggest that while the morpheme identification system in Grade 5-6 children is not yet adult-like, it is sufficiently mature to automatically analyze the morphemic structure of novel letter strings. These findings are discussed in the context of theoretical accounts of morphological processing across reading development. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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28. Neuro-anatomical correlates of impaired retrieval of verbs and nouns: Interaction of grammatical class, imageability and actionality
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Aggujaro, Silvia, Crepaldi, Davide, Pistarini, Caterina, Taricco, Mariangela, and Luzzatti, Claudio
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- 2006
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29. Noun–verb dissociation in aphasia: The role of imageability and functional locus of the lesion
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Crepaldi, Davide, Aggujaro, Silvia, Arduino, Lisa Saskia, Zonca, Giusy, Ghirardi, Graziella, Inzaghi, Maria Grazia, Colombo, Mariarosa, Chierchia, Gennaro, and Luzzatti, Claudio
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- 2006
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30. Verb-Noun Double Dissociation in Aphasia: Theoretical and Neuroanatomical Foundations
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Luzzatti, Claudio, Aggujaro, Silvia, and Crepaldi, Davide
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- 2006
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31. Masked Morphological Priming and Sensitivity to the Statistical Structure of Form--to--Meaning Mapping in L2.
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VIVIANI, EVA and CREPALDI, DAVIDE
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PRIMING (Psychology) , *MORPHOLOGY (Grammar) , *SECOND language acquisition , *ORTHOGRAPHY & spelling , *BILINGUALISM - Abstract
In one's native language, visual word identification is based on early morphological analysis and is sensitive to the statistical structure of the mapping between form and meaning (Orthography--to--Semantic Consistency, OSC). How these mechanisms apply to a second language is much less clear. We recruited L1 Italian--L2 English speakers for a masked priming task where the relationship between prime and target was morphologically transparent, e.g., employer--EMPLOY, morphologically opaque, e.g., corner-CORN, or merely orthographic, e.g., brothel--BROTH. Critically, participants underwent thorough testing of their lexical, morphological, phonological, spelling, and semantic proficiency in their second language. By exploring a wide spectrum of L2 proficiency, we showed that this factor critically qualifies L2 priming. Genuine morphological facilitation only arises as proficiency grows, while orthographic priming shrinks as L2 competence increases. OSC was also found to modulate priming and interact with proficiency, providing an alternative way of describing the transparency continuum in derivational morphology. Overall, these data illustrate the trajectory towards a fully consolidated L2 lexicon and show that masked priming and sensitivity to OSC are key trackers of this process. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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32. Knowledge of Statistics or Statistical Learning? Readers Prioritize the Statistics of their Native Language Over the Learning of Local Regularities.
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LELONKIEWICZ, JAROSŁAW R., ULLMAN, MICHAEL T., and CREPALDI, DAVIDE
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STATISTICAL learning ,NATIVE language ,READING ,VOCABULARY ,WORD recognition - Abstract
A large body of evidence suggests that people spontaneously and implicitly learn about regularities present in the visual input. Although theorized as critical for reading, this ability has been demonstrated mostly with pseudo-fonts or highly atypical artificial words. We tested whether local statistical regularities are extracted from materials that more closely resemble one's native language. In two experiments, Italian speakers saw a set of letter strings modelled on the Italian lexicon and guessed which of these strings were words in a fictitious language and which were foils. Unknown to participants, words could be distinguished from foils based on their average bigram frequency. Surprisingly, in both experiments, we found no evidence that participants relied on this regularity. Instead, lexical decisions were guided by minimal bigram frequency, a cue rooted in participants' native language. We discuss the implications of these findings for accounts of statistical learning and visual word processing. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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33. Form and Function: A Study on the Distribution of the Inflectional Endings in Italian Nouns and Adjectives.
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Pescuma, Valentina Nicole, Zanini, Chiara, Crepaldi, Davide, and Franzon, Francesca
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ADJECTIVES (Grammar) ,INFLECTION (Grammar) ,NOUNS ,DISTRIBUTION (Probability theory) ,GRAMMATICAL gender - Abstract
Inflectional values, such as singular and plural, sustain agreement relations between constituents in sentences, allowing sentence parsing and prediction in online processing. Ideally, these processes would be facilitated by a consistent and transparent correspondence between the inflectional values and their form: for example, the value of plural should always be expressed by the same ending, and that ending should only express plural. Experimental research reports higher processing costs in the presence of a non-transparent relation between forms and values. While this effect was found in several languages, and typological research shows that consistency is far from common in morphological paradigms, it is still somewhat difficult to precisely quantify the transparency degree of the inflected forms. Furthermore, to date, no accounts have quantified the transparency in inflection with regard to the declensional classes and the extent to which it is expressed across different parts of speech, depending on whether these act as controllers of the agreement (e.g., nouns) or as targets (e.g., adjectives). We present a case study on Italian, a language that marks gender and number features in nouns and adjectives. This work provides measures of the distribution of forms in the noun and adjective inflection in Italian, and quantifies the degree of form-value transparency with respect to inflectional endings and declensional classes. In order to obtain these measures, we built Flex It, a dedicated large-scale database of inflectional morphology of Italian, and made it available, in order to sustain further theoretical and empirical research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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34. Sub-word orthographic processing and semantic activation as revealed by ERPs.
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Hasenäcker, Jana, Nadalini, Andrea, and Crepaldi, Davide
- Abstract
The present study investigated ERP signatures of processing sub-word orthography, that is, shorter words embedded within longer words, in a non-priming task that pushes for semantics. Participants performed a semantic categorisation task on pseudosuffixed and nonsuffixed words, like
corner andpeace , that contained embedded words (corn ,pea ) either congruent or not with the probe category (e.g. FOOD vs. ANIMAL). While the task required semantic activation of the whole-word, sub-word orthography and semantics were activated. Results indicate stronger negativity from as early as ∼230 ms after word onset when the embedded word did not fit the category, but only for pseudosuffixed words. The observed neural dynamics point to rapid extraction of sub-word orthography and prompt activation of meaning thereupon. We discuss the results with respect to literature on morphological processing, context-dependency of the mechanisms, and interpretations of the N250 and N400 components. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
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35. No fruits without color: Cross-modal priming and EEG reveal different roles for different features across semantic categories.
- Author
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Argiris, Georgette, Rumiati, Raffaella I., and Crepaldi, Davide
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FRUIT ,ELECTROENCEPHALOGRAPHY ,EVOKED potentials (Electrophysiology) ,FRUIT processing ,VEGETABLES ,COLORS ,COLOR of fruit - Abstract
Category-specific impairments witnessed in patients with semantic deficits have broadly dissociated into natural and artificial kinds. However, how the category of food (more specifically, fruits and vegetables) fits into this distinction has been difficult to interpret, given a pattern of deficit that has inconsistently mapped onto either kind, despite its intuitive membership to the natural domain. The present study explores the effects of a manipulation of a visual sensory (i.e., color) or functional (i.e., orientation) feature on the consequential semantic processing of fruits and vegetables (and tools, by comparison), first at the behavioral and then at the neural level. The categorization of natural (i.e., fruits/vegetables) and artificial (i.e., utensils) entities was investigated via cross–modal priming. Reaction time analysis indicated a reduction in priming for color-modified natural entities and orientation-modified artificial entities. Standard event-related potentials (ERP) analysis was performed, in addition to linear classification. For natural entities, a N400 effect at central channel sites was observed for the color-modified condition compared relative to normal and orientation conditions, with this difference confirmed by classification analysis. Conversely, there was no significant difference between conditions for the artificial category in either analysis. These findings provide strong evidence that color is an integral property to the categorization of fruits/vegetables, thus substantiating the claim that feature-based processing guides as a function of semantic category. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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36. Morpheme Position Coding in Reading Development as Explored With a Letter Search Task.
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HASENÄCKER, JANA, KTORI, MARIA, and CREPALDI, DAVIDE
- Subjects
MORPHEMICS ,COMPUTER programming ,SUFFIXES & prefixes (Grammar) ,PSYCHOLOGY ,PSYCHOLINGUISTICS - Abstract
Suffixes have been shown to be recognized as units of processing in visual word recognition and their identification has been argued to be position-specific in skilled adult readers: in lexical decision tasks suffixes are automatically identified at word endings, but not at word beginnings. The present study set out to investigate whether position-specific coding can be detected with a letter search task and whether children already code suffixes as position-specific units. A preregistered experiment was conducted in Italian in which 3rd-graders, 5th-graders, and adults had to detect a target letter that was either contained in the suffix of a pseudoword (e.g., S in flagish) or in a non-suffix control (e.g., S in flagosh). To investigate sensitivity to position, letters also had to be detected in suffixes and non-suffixes placed in reversed position, that is in the beginning of pseudowords (e.g., S in ishflag vs. oshflag). Results suggested position-specific processing differences between suffixes and non-suffixes that develop throughout reading development. However, some effects were weak and only partially compatible with the hypotheses. Therefore, a second experiment was conducted. The effects of position-specific suffix identification could not be replicated. A combined analysis additionally using a Bayesian approach indicated no processing differences between suffixes and non-suffixes in our task. We discuss potential interpretations and the possibility of letter search being unsuited to investigate morpheme processing. We connect our example of failed self-replication to the current discussion about the replication crisis in psychology and the lesson psycholinguistics can learn. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
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37. Consistency measures individuate dissociating semantic modulations in priming paradigms: A new look on semantics in the processing of (complex) words.
- Author
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Amenta, Simona, Crepaldi, Davide, and Marelli, Marco
- Subjects
- *
SEMANTICS , *ORTHOGRAPHY & spelling , *MORPHEMICS , *VOCABULARY - Abstract
In human language the mapping between form and meaning is arbitrary, as there is no direct connection between words and the objects that they represent. However, within a given language, it is possible to recognise systematic associations that support productivity and comprehension. In this work, we focus on the consistency between orthographic forms and meaning, and we investigate how the cognitive system may exploit it to process words. We take morphology as our case study, since it arguably represents one of the most notable examples of systematicity in form–meaning mapping. In a series of three experiments, we investigate the impact of form–meaning mapping in word processing by testing new consistency metrics as predictors of priming magnitude in primed lexical decision. In Experiment 1, we re-analyse data from five masked morphological priming studies and show that orthography–semantics–consistency explains independent variance in priming magnitude, suggesting that word semantics is accessed already at early stages of word processing and that crucially semantic access is constrained by word orthography. In Experiments 2 and 3, we investigate whether this pattern is replicated when looking at semantic priming. In Experiment 2, we show that orthography–semantics–consistency is not a viable predictor of priming magnitude with longer stimulus onset asynchrony (SOA). However, in Experiment 3, we develop a new semantic consistency measure based on the semantic density of target neighbourhoods. This measure is shown to significantly predict independent variance in semantic priming effect. Overall, our results indicate that consistency measures provide crucial information for the understanding of word processing. Specifically, the dissociation between measures and priming paradigms shows that different priming conditions are associated with the activation of different semantic cohorts. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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- View/download PDF
38. The psycholinguistic and affective structure of words conveying pain.
- Author
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Borelli, Eleonora, Crepaldi, Davide, Porro, Carlo Adolfo, and Cacciari, Cristina
- Subjects
- *
NEUROSCIENCES , *NEUROPHYSIOLOGY , *EMOTIONS , *MEDICAL research , *MACHINE learning - Abstract
Despite the flourishing research on the relationships between affect and language, the characteristics of pain-related words, a specific type of negative words, have never been systematically investigated from a psycholinguistic and emotional perspective, despite their psychological relevance. This study offers psycholinguistic, affective, and pain-related norms for words expressing physical and social pain. This may provide a useful tool for the selection of stimulus materials in future studies on negative emotions and/or pain. We explored the relationships between psycholinguistic, affective, and pain-related properties of 512 Italian words (nouns, adjectives, and verbs) conveying physical and social pain by asking 1020 Italian participants to provide ratings of Familiarity, Age of Acquisition, Imageability, Concreteness, Context Availability, Valence, Arousal, Pain-Relatedness, Intensity, and Unpleasantness. We also collected data concerning Length, Written Frequency (Subtlex-IT), N-Size, Orthographic Levenshtein Distance 20, Neighbor Mean Frequency, and Neighbor Maximum Frequency of each word. Interestingly, the words expressing social pain were rated as more negative, arousing, pain-related, and conveying more intense and unpleasant experiences than the words conveying physical pain. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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- View/download PDF
39. MultiPic: A standardized set of 750 drawings with norms for six European languages.
- Author
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Duñabeitia, Jon Andoni, Crepaldi, Davide, Meyer, Antje S., New, Boris, Pliatsikas, Christos, Smolka, Eva, and Brysbaert, Marc
- Subjects
- *
COGNITIVE neuroscience , *MULTILINGUAL communication , *PSYCHOLINGUISTICS , *SIMILARITY (Language learning) , *CROSS-cultural communication - Abstract
Numerous studies in psychology, cognitive neuroscience and psycholinguistics have used pictures of objects as stimulus materials. Currently, authors engaged in cross-linguistic work or wishing to run parallel studies at multiple sites where different languages are spoken must rely on rather small sets of black-and-white or colored line drawings. These sets are increasingly experienced as being too limited. Therefore, we constructed a new set of 750 colored pictures of concrete concepts. This set, MultiPic, constitutes a new valuable tool for cognitive scientists investigating language, visual perception, memory and/or attention in monolingual or multilingual populations. Importantly, the MultiPic databank has been normed in six different European languages (British English, Spanish, French, Dutch, Italian and German). All stimuli and norms are freely available at http://www.bcbl.eu/databases/multipic. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Modeling the Relations Among Morphological Awareness Dimensions, Vocabulary Knowledge, and Reading Comprehension in Adult Basic Education Students.
- Author
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Tighe, Elizabeth L., Schatschneider, Christopher, Crepaldi, Davide, and Tomás, Jose Manuel
- Subjects
VOCABULARY ,COMPREHENSION ,BASIC education ,AWARENESS ,STRUCTURAL equation modeling - Abstract
This study extended the findings of Tighe and Schatschneider (2015) by investigating the predictive utility of separate dimensions of morphological awareness as well as vocabulary knowledge to reading comprehension in adult basic education (ABE) students. We competed two- and three-factor structural equation models of reading comprehension. A three-factor model of real word morphological awareness, pseudoword morphological awareness, and vocabulary knowledge emerged as the best fit and accounted for 79% of the reading comprehension variance. The results indicated that the constructs contributed jointly to reading comprehension; however, vocabulary knowledge was the only potentially unique predictor (p = 0.052), accounting for an additional 5.6% of the variance. This study demonstrates the feasibility of applying a latent variable modeling approach to examine individual differences in the reading comprehension skills of ABE students. Further, this study replicates the findings of Tighe and Schatschneider (2015) on the importance of differentiating among dimensions of morphological awareness in this population. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
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41. Masked suffix priming and morpheme positional constraints.
- Author
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Crepaldi, Davide, Hemsworth, Lara, Davis, Colin J., and Rastle, Kathleen
- Subjects
- *
MORPHEMICS , *ROOTS (English language) , *LEXEME , *LEXICOLOGY , *LANGUAGE arts - Abstract
Although masked stem priming (e.g., dealer–DEAL) is one of the most established effects in visual word identification, it is less clear whether primes and targets sharing a suffix (e.g., kindness–WILDNESS) also yield facilitation. In a new take on this issue, we show that prime nonwords facilitate lexical decisions to target words ending with the same suffix (sheeter–TEACHER) compared to a condition where the critical suffix was substituted by another one (sheetal–TEACHER) or by an unrelated nonmorphological ending (sheetub–TEACHER). We also show that this effect is genuinely morphological, as no priming emerged in noncomplex items with the same orthographic characteristics (sportel–BROTHELvs.sportic–BROTHELvs.sportur–BROTHEL). In a further experiment, we took advantage of these results to assess whether suffixes are recognized in a position-specific fashion. Masked suffix priming did not emerge when the relative order of stems and suffixes was reversed in the prime nonwords—ersheetdid not yield any time saving in the identification ofteacheras compared to eitheralsheetorobsheet. We take these results to show that –erwas not identified as a morpheme inersheet, thus indicating that suffix identification is position specific. This conclusion is in line with data on interference effects in nonword rejection and strongly constrains theoretical proposals on how complex words are identified. In particular, because these findings were reported in a masked priming paradigm, they suggest that positional constraints operate early, most likely at a prelexical level of morpho-orthographic analysis. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2016
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42. Space and time in the sighted and blind.
- Author
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Bottini, Roberto, Crepaldi, Davide, Casasanto, Daniel, Crollen, Virgine, and Collignon, Olivier
- Subjects
- *
SPACETIME , *BLINDNESS , *ORTHOGRAPHY & spelling , *READING , *INFORMATION theory - Abstract
Across many cultures people conceptualize time as extending along a horizontal Mental Time Line (MTL). This spatial mapping of time has been shown to depend on experience with written text, and may also depend on other graphic conventions such as graphs and calendars. All of this information is typically acquired visually, suggesting that visual experience may play an important role in the development of the MTL. Do blind people develop a MTL? If so, how does it compare with the MTL in sighted? In this study we tested early blind, late blind and sighted participants in a space–time congruity task. Participants had to classify temporal words by pressing a right and a left key, either with crossed or uncrossed hands. We found that the MTL develops in the absence of vision, and that it is based on the same external frame of reference in sighted and blind people. Reading braille may provide the same experiential link between space and time in the manual modality as reading printed text provides in the visual modality. These results showing a similar MTL in sighted and blind participants contrast with previous results showing that the Mental Number Line (MNL) depends on different spatial coordinates in the sighted and the blind, and suggest that spatial representations of time and number may have different experiential bases. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Semantic transparency in free stems: The effect of Orthography-Semantics Consistency on word recognition.
- Author
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Marelli, Marco, Amenta, Simona, and Crepaldi, Davide
- Subjects
WORD recognition ,SEMANTIC memory ,ORTHOGRAPHY & spelling ,LEXICON ,SEMANTICS - Abstract
A largely overlooked side effect in most studies of morphological priming is a consistent main effect of semantic transparency across priming conditions. That is, participants are faster at recognizing stems from transparent sets (e.g.,farm) in comparison to stems from opaque sets (e.g.,fruit), regardless of the preceding primes. This suggests that semantic transparency may also be consistently associated with some property of the stem word. We propose that this property might be traced back to the consistency, throughout the lexicon, between the orthographic form of a word and its meaning, here namedOrthography-Semantics Consistency(OSC), and that an imbalance in OSC scores might explain the “stem transparency” effect. We exploited distributional semantic models to quantitatively characterize OSC, and tested its effect on visual word identification relying on large-scale data taken from the British Lexicon Project (BLP). Results indicated that (a) the “stem transparency” effect is solid and reliable, insofar as it holds in BLP lexical decision times (Experiment 1); (b) an imbalance in terms of OSC can account for it (Experiment 2); and (c) more generally, OSC explains variance in a large item sample from the BLP, proving to be an effective predictor in visual word access (Experiment 3). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Insights from letter position dyslexia on morphological decomposition in reading.
- Author
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Friedmann, Naama, Gvion, Aviah, Nisim, Roni, Crepaldi, Davide, and Stavrakaki, Stavroula
- Subjects
DYSLEXIA ,READING disability ,MORPHEMICS ,WORD recognition ,AFFIXES (Grammar) ,SENTENCES (Grammar) - Abstract
We explored morphological decomposition in reading, the locus in the reading process in which it takes place and its nature, comparing different types of morphemes. We assessed these questions through the analysis of letter position errors in readers with letter position dyslexia (LPD). LPD is a selective impairment to letter position encoding in the early stage of word reading, which results in letter migrations (such as reading "cloud" for "could"). We used the fact that migrations in LPD occur mainly in word-interior letters, whereas exterior letters rarely migrate. The rationale was that if morphological decomposition occurs prior to letter position encoding and strips off affixes, word-interior letters adjacent to an affix (e.g., signs-signs) would become exterior following affix-stripping and hence exhibit fewer migrations. We tested 11 Hebrew readers with developmental LPD and 1 with acquired LPD in 6 experiments of reading aloud, lexical decision, and comprehension, at the single word and sentence levels (compared with 25 age-matched control participants). The LPD participants read a total of 12,496 migratable words. We examined migrations next to inflectional, derivational, or bound function morphemes compared with migrations of exterior letters. The results were that root letters adjacent to inflectional and derivational morphemes were treated like middle letters, and migrated frequently, whereas root letters adjacent to bound function morphemes patterned with exterior letters, and almost never migrated. Given that LPD is a pre-lexical deficit, these results indicate that morphological decomposition takes place in an early, pre-lexical stage. The finding that morphologically complex nonwords showed the same patterns indicates that this decomposition is structurally, rather than lexically, driven. We suggest that letter position encoding takes place before morphological analysis, but in some cases, as with bound function morphemes, the complex word is re-analyzed as two separate words. In this reanalysis, letter positions in each constituent word are encoded separately, and hence the exterior letters of the root are treated as exterior and do not migrate. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Discriminating languages in bilingual contexts: the impact of orthographic markedness.
- Author
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Casaponsa, Aina, Carreiras, Manuel, Duñabeitia, Jon A., Grainger, Jonathan, and Crepaldi, Davide
- Subjects
BILINGUALISM ,ORTHOGRAPHY & spelling ,LEXICAL access ,MARKEDNESS (Linguistics) ,WORD recognition - Abstract
Does language-specific orthography help language detection and lexical access in naturalistic bilingual contexts? This study investigates how L2 orthotactic properties influence bilingual language detection in bilingual societies and the extent to which it modulates lexical access and single word processing. Language specificity of naturalistically learnt L2 words was manipulated by including bigram combinations that could be either L2 language-specific or common in the two languages known by bilinguals. A group of balanced bilinguals and a group of highly proficient but unbalanced bilinguals who grew up in a bilingual society were tested, together with a group of monolinguals (for control purposes). All the participants completed a speeded language detection task and a progressive demasking task. Results showed that the use of the information of orthotactic rules across languages depends on the task demands at hand, and on participants? proficiency in the second language. The influence of language orthotactic rules during language detection, lexical access and word identification are discussed according to the most prominent models of bilingual word recognition. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Clustering the lexicon in the brain: a meta-analysis of the neurofunctional evidence on noun and verb processing.
- Author
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Crepaldi, Davide, Berlingeri, Manuela, Cattinelli, Isabella, Borghese, Nunzio A., Luzzatti, Claudio, and Paulesu, Eraldo
- Subjects
INFORMATION theory ,COMPARATIVE linguistics ,MOUNTAINS ,META-analysis ,NOUNS - Abstract
Although it is widely accepted that nouns and verbs are functionally independent linguistic entities, it is less clear whether their processing recruits different brain areas. This issue is particularly relevant for those theories of lexical semantics (and, more in general, of cognition) that suggest the embodiment of abstract concepts, i.e., based strongly on perceptual and motoric representations. This paper presents a formal meta-analysis of the neuroimaging evidence on noun and verb processing in order to address this dichotomy more effectively at the anatomical level. We used a hierarchical clustering algorithm that grouped fMRI/PET activation peaks solely on the basis of spatial proximity. Cluster specificity for grammatical classwas then tested on the basis of the noun-verb distribution of the activation peaks included in each cluster. Thirty-two clusters were identified: three were associated with nouns across different tasks (in the right inferior temporal gyrus, the left angular gyrus, and the left inferior parietal gyrus); one with verbs across different tasks (in the posterior part of the right middle temporal gyrus); and three showed verb specificity in some tasks and noun specificity in others (in the left and right inferior frontal gyrus and the left insula). These results do not support the popular tenets that verb processing is predominantly based in the left frontal cortex and noun processing relies specifically on temporal regions; nor do they support the idea that verb lexical-semantic representations are heavily based on embodied motoric information. Our findings suggest instead that the cerebral circuits deputed to noun and verb processing lie in close spatial proximity in a wide network including frontal, parietal, and temporal regions. The data also indicate a predominant-but not exclusive-left lateralization of the network. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Lexical-semantic variables affecting picture and word naming in Chinese: A mixed logit model study in aphasia.
- Author
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Weekes, Brendan Stuart, Crepaldi, Davide, Che, Wei-Chun, Su, I.-Fan, and Luzzatti, Claudio
- Subjects
- *
APHASIA , *NEUROPSYCHOLOGY , *CHINESE people , *MULTILEVEL models , *BRAIN diseases , *SPEECH disorders , *INDO-European languages - Abstract
Lexical-semantic variables (such as word frequency, imageability and age of acquisition) have been studied extensively in neuropsychology to address the structure of the word production system. The evidence available on this issue is still rather controversial, mainly because of the very complex interrelations between lexical-semantic variables. Moreover, it is not clear whether the results obtained in Indo-European languages also hold in languages with a completely different structure and script, such as Chinese. The objective of the present study is to investigate this specific issue by studying the effect of word frequency, imageability, age of acquisition, visual complexity of the stimuli, grammatical class and morphological structure in word and picture naming in Chinese. The effect of these variables on naming and reading accuracy of healthy and brain-damaged individuals is evaluated using mixed-effect models, a statistical technique that allows to model both fixed and random effects; this feature substantially enhances the statistical power of the technique, so that several variables - and their complex interrelations - can be handled effectively in a unique analysis. We found that grammatical class interacts consistently across tasks with morphological structure: all participants, both healthy and brain-damaged, found simple nouns significantly easier to read and name than complex nouns, whereas simple and complex verbs were of comparable difficulty. We also found that imageability was a strong predictor in picture naming, but not in word naming, whereas the contrary held true for age of acquisition. These results are taken to indicate the existence of a morphological level of processing in the Chinese word production system, and that reading aloud may occur along a non-semantic route (either lexical or sub-lexical) in this language. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
48. On nouns, verbs, lexemes, and lemmas: Evidence from the spontaneous speech of seven aphasic patients.
- Author
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Crepaldi, Davide, Ingignoli, Chiara, Verga, Ruggero, Contardi, Antonella, Semenza, Carlo, and Luzzatti, Claudio
- Subjects
- *
SPEECH evaluation , *APHASIA , *RESEARCH methodology , *RESEARCH funding , *LOGISTIC regression analysis , *STUTTERING , *DIAGNOSIS - Abstract
Background: Although disproportionate impairment of noun or verb retrieval has been described on the basis of the evidence from several aphasic cases since the mid 1980s, with different theoretical frames being proposed to account for noun-verb dissociation, very few studies have dealt with this dissociation in spontaneous speech. Aims: The objectives of this study were to investigate (i) whether the dissociation also emerged in connected speech, and (ii) whether the analysis of patients' narratives could shed light on the functional damage underlying their grammatical-class-specific impairment. Methods & Procedures: Two non-fluent verb-impaired patients, two fluent verb-impaired patients, and three fluent noun-impaired patients participated in this study. Their noun-verb dissociation was preliminarily assessed through a picture-naming task, following which their spontaneous speech was collected and analysed using a single-case approach, taking into consideration both lexical productivity (as indicated by the number of different tokens produced by the patients) and lexical diversity (as indicated by the number of different types and stems used by the patients). Outcomes & Results: Non-fluent verb-impaired patients tended to produce a lower proportion of verb types than unimpaired control participants, as opposed to fluent verb-impaired patients, who produced a normal verb rate in their spontaneous speech on all counting procedures. One out of three fluent noun-impaired patients produced a lower proportion of noun tokens, types, and stems compared to normal speakers. Conclusions: The data presented in this paper indicate that noun-verb dissociation as assessed in picture-naming tasks might not emerge in spontaneous speech and indicates the need for the inclusion of a lemma level in models of word production that aims at explaining grammatical-class-specific impairments in people with aphasia. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Head position and the mental representation of nominal compounds: A constituent priming study in Italian.
- Author
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Marelli, Marco, Crepaldi, Davide, and Luzzatti, Claudio
- Subjects
MORPHOLOGY (Grammar) ,PSYCHOLINGUISTICS ,COGNITIVE development ,NOMINALS (Grammar) ,LEXICAL grammar ,LEXICON - Abstract
There is a significant body of psycholinguistic evidence that supports the hypothesis of an access to constituent representation during the mental processing of compound words. However it is not clear whether the internal hierarchy of the constituents (i.e., headedness) plays a role in their mental lexical processing and it is not possible to disentangle the effect of headedness from that of constituent position in languages that admit only head-final compounds, like English or Dutch. The present study addresses this issue in two constituent priming experiments (SOA 300ms) with a lexical decision task. Italian endocentric (head-initial and head-final) and exocentric nominal compounds were employed as stimuli and the position of the primed constituent was manipulated. A first-level priming effect was found, confirming the automatic access to constituent representation. Moreover, in head-final compounds data reveal a larger priming effect for the head than for the modifying constituent. These results suggest that different kinds of compounds have a different representation at mental level: while head-final compounds are represented with an internal head-modifier hierarchy, head-initial and exocentric compounds have a lexicalised, internally flat representation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Nouns and verbs in the brain: Grammatical class and task specific effects as revealed by fMRI.
- Author
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Berlingeri, Manuela, Crepaldi, Davide, Roberti, Rossella, Scialfa, Giuseppe, Luzzatti, Claudio, and Paulesu, Eraldo
- Subjects
- *
MAGNETIC resonance imaging , *BRAIN , *DIAGNOSTIC imaging , *REACTION time , *VERBS - Abstract
The wide variety of techniques and tasks used to study the neural correlates of noun and verb processing has resulted in a body of inconsistent evidence. We performed a functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) experiment to detect grammatical class effects that generalize across tasks. A total of 12 participants undertook a grammatical-class switching task (GCST), in which they were presented with a noun (or a verb) and were asked to retrieve the corresponding verb (or noun), and a classical picture naming task (PNT) widely used in the previous aphasiological and imaging literature. The GCST was explicitly designed to ensure control over confounding variables, such as stimulus complexity or imageability. Conjunction analyses of the haemodynamic responses measured in the two tasks indicated a shared verb-related activation of a dorsal premotor and posterior parietal network, pointing to a strong relationship between verb representation and action-oriented (visuo-)spatial knowledge. On the other hand, no brain area was consistently associated with nouns in both tasks. Moreover, there were task-dependent differences between noun and verb retrieval both at behavioural and at physiological level; the grammatical class that elicited the longest reaction times in both tasks (i.e., verbs in the PNT and nouns in the GCST) triggered a greater activation of the left inferior frontal gyrus. Therefore, we suggest that this area reflects a general increase in task demand rather than verb processing per se. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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