The broth in my brother’s brothel: Morpho-orthographic segmentation in visual word recognition

[1]  J. Segui,et al.  Morphological priming without morphological relationship , 2003 .

[2]  Kenneth I Forster,et al.  DMDX: A Windows display program with millisecond accuracy , 2003, Behavior research methods, instruments, & computers : a journal of the Psychonomic Society, Inc.

[3]  William D. Marslen-Wilson,et al.  Frequency effects in processing inflected Dutch nouns: A distributed connectionist account , 2003 .

[4]  David C. Plaut,et al.  Are non-semantic morphological effects incompatible with a distributed connectionist approach to lexical processing? , 2000 .

[5]  J. Grainger,et al.  Effects of prime word frequency and cumulative root frequency in masked morphological priming , 2000 .

[6]  Matthew H. Davis,et al.  Morphological and semantic effects in visual word recognition: A time-course study , 2000 .

[7]  Alexander Pollatsek,et al.  The processing of derived and inflected suffixed words during reading , 2000 .

[8]  R. Baayen,et al.  The balance of storage and computation in morphological processing: the role of word formation type, affixal homonymy, and productivity. , 2000, Journal of experimental psychology. Learning, memory, and cognition.

[9]  M. Brent Speech segmentation and word discovery: a computational perspective , 1999, Trends in Cognitive Sciences.

[10]  L. Feldman,et al.  Morphological Priming: The Role of Prime Duration, Semantic Transparency, and Affix Position , 1999, Brain and Language.

[11]  J. Rueckl,et al.  The Influence of Morphological Regularities on the Dynamics of a Connectionist Network , 1999, Brain and Language.

[12]  N. Chater,et al.  Bootstrapping Word Boundaries: A Bottom-up Corpus-Based Approach to Speech Segmentation , 1997, Cognitive Psychology.

[13]  T. Landauer,et al.  A Solution to Plato's Problem: The Latent Semantic Analysis Theory of Acquisition, Induction, and Representation of Knowledge. , 1997 .

[14]  Marcus Taft,et al.  Interactive-activation as a framework for understanding morphological processing , 1994 .

[15]  K. Forster,et al.  REPETITION PRIMING AND FREQUENCY ATTENUATION IN LEXICAL ACCESS , 1984 .

[16]  R. F. Stanners,et al.  Memory representation for morphologically related words. , 1979 .

[17]  K. Forster,et al.  Lexical storage and retrieval of prefixed words , 1975 .

[18]  Matthew H. Davis,et al.  Reading morphologically complex words: Some thoughts from masked priming. , 2003 .

[19]  Laurie Beth Feldman,et al.  Discrepancies between orthographic and unrelated baselines in masked priming undermine a decompositional account of morphological facilitation. , 2002, Journal of experimental psychology. Learning, memory, and cognition.

[20]  M Coltheart,et al.  DRC: a dual route cascaded model of visual word recognition and reading aloud. , 2001, Psychological review.

[21]  L. Feldman,et al.  Are morphological effects distinguishable from the effects of shared meaning and shared form? , 2000, Journal of experimental psychology. Learning, memory, and cognition.

[22]  R. H. Baayen,et al.  The CELEX Lexical Database (CD-ROM) , 1996 .

[23]  W. Marslen-Wilson,et al.  Morphology and meaning in the English mental lexicon. , 1994 .

[24]  Mark S. Seidenberg,et al.  Sublexical structures in visual word recognition: Access units or orthographic redundancy? , 1987 .