TY - JOUR
T1 - Decomposition in early stages of learning novel morphologically derived words
T2 - The impact of linear vs. non-linear structure
AU - Nathaniel, Upasana
AU - Eidelsztein, Stav
AU - Geskin, Kate Girsh
AU - Yamasaki, Brianna L.
AU - Nir, Bracha
AU - Dronjic, Vedran
AU - Booth, James R.
AU - Bitan, Tali
N1 - Publisher Copyright: © 2023 Elsevier B.V.
PY - 2023/11
Y1 - 2023/11
N2 - We examined whether morphological decomposition takes place in early stages of learning a novel language, and whether morphological structure (linear vs. non-linear) influences decomposition. Across four sessions, 41 native-Hebrew speakers learned morphologically derived words in a novel morpho-lexicon, with two complex conditions: linear and non-linear; and a third simple condition with monomorphemic words. Participants showed faster learning of trained words in the linear condition, and better generalization to untrained words for both complex conditions compared to the simple condition, with better performance for linear than non-linear morphology. Learning the root morpheme, which provides a concrete meaning, was better than learning template/suffix morphemes, which are more abstract. Overall, our results suggest that saliency of discrete units plays an important role in decomposition in early stages of learning derived words, even for speakers highly familiar with the non-linear structure in their L1.
AB - We examined whether morphological decomposition takes place in early stages of learning a novel language, and whether morphological structure (linear vs. non-linear) influences decomposition. Across four sessions, 41 native-Hebrew speakers learned morphologically derived words in a novel morpho-lexicon, with two complex conditions: linear and non-linear; and a third simple condition with monomorphemic words. Participants showed faster learning of trained words in the linear condition, and better generalization to untrained words for both complex conditions compared to the simple condition, with better performance for linear than non-linear morphology. Learning the root morpheme, which provides a concrete meaning, was better than learning template/suffix morphemes, which are more abstract. Overall, our results suggest that saliency of discrete units plays an important role in decomposition in early stages of learning derived words, even for speakers highly familiar with the non-linear structure in their L1.
KW - Artificial language
KW - Decomposition
KW - Derivational
KW - Learning
KW - Morphology
KW - Second language acquisition
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U2 - 10.1016/j.cognition.2023.105604
DO - 10.1016/j.cognition.2023.105604
M3 - Article
C2 - 37660445
SN - 0010-0277
VL - 240
JO - Cognition
JF - Cognition
M1 - 105604
ER -