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Understanding the mental lexicon through neglect dyslexia: a study on compound noun reading
13
Citations
54
References
2012
Year
NeuropsychologyNeurolinguisticsSemantic ProcessingPsycholinguisticsLanguage LearningNeglect DyslexiaSocial SciencesCognitive LinguisticsReading ComprehensionLanguage AcquisitionReadingLanguage StudiesSpecific Learning DisorderCognitive ScienceCompound Noun ReadingMental LexiconItalian Compound NounsLanguage DisorderCompound ConstituentsCommunicative DisordersLanguage ComprehensionLinguistics
The present study employs neglect dyslexia (ND) as an experimental model to study compound-word processing; in particular, it investigates whether compound constituents are hierarchically organized at mental level and addresses the possibility of whole-word representation. Seven Italian-speaking patients suffering from ND participated in a word naming task. Both left-headed (pescespada, swordfish) and right-headed (astronave, spaceship) Italian compound nouns were used as stimuli. Non-existent compounds, which were generated by substituting the leftmost constituent of a compound with an orthographically similar word (e.g., *pestespada, *plaguesword), were also employed. A significant headedness effect emerged in the group analysis: patients read left-headed compounds better than right-headed compounds. A significant lexicality effect was also found: the participants read real compounds better than their non-existent compound pairs. Moreover, logit mixed-effects analyses indicated a left-hand constituent frequency effect. Results are discussed in terms of hierarchical representation of compounds and direct access to compound lemma nodes.
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