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Date created: 2016-12-28 07:46 AM | Last Updated: 2016-12-28 08:26 AM

Category: Project

Description: PUBLISHED STUDY. According to a recent hypothesis, the organization of letters into groups of successive consonants and vowels (i.e., CV pattern) constrains the orthographic structure of words. Here, we examined to what extent the morphological structure of words modifies the influence of the CV pattern in a syllable counting task. Participants were presented with written words matched for the number of syllables and comprising either one vowel cluster less than the number of syllables (hiatus words, e.g., crØation) or the same number of vowel clusters (control words, e.g., crØpiter). Participants were slower and less accurate for hiatus than control stimuli, be it words (Experiments 1, 3) or pseudowords (Experiment 2). More importantly, this hiatus effect was present even when the stimuli had a morphemic boundary falling within the hiatus (e.g., rØ-agir). The results suggest that the CV pattern of items more strongly influences performance in the syllable counting task than the morphological structure.

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cognitive psychologyconsonants and vowelsCV patternexperimental psychologyhiatusmorphemesprefixpsycholinstuisticspsychology of languagereadingvisual word recognitionwritten word processing

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