BEHAVIORAL AND COMPUTATIONAL STUDIES OF MORPHOLOGY
Project Number5R01MH058723-02
Contact PI/Project LeaderSEIDENBERG, MARK S
Awardee OrganizationUNIVERSITY OF SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA
Description
Abstract Text
DESCRIPTION (Adapted from applicant's abstract): This proposal describes
research on inflectional and derivational morphology and their role in
reading and related tasks. Morphology is the aspect of language concerning
the forms of words. The issues to be addressed concern how this information
is represented in lexical memory; how it relates to other types of
information including orthography, phonology, and semantics; and how it is
used in processing. The research utilizes both behavioral studies of
skilled language users and computer simulation modeling. The issues are
framed in terms of connectionist principles concerning knowledge
representation, acquisition, and processing that were developed in previous
research on reading simple, monomorphemic words. The proposed research
attempts to extend this theoretical framework to the processing of more
complex words. The main emphasis of the research is on the quasiregular
character of inflectional and derivational morphology: the fact that both
systems are productive and can be described as "rule-governed" but also
admit many exceptions that deviate from what is predicted from the rules.
These phenomena have standardly been treated within dual-route models of
lexical access in which there are separate mechanisms for the rule-governed
cases and exceptions. Connectionist models provide an alternative approach
in which all forms are governed by a single network. The experiments focus
on phenomena that differentiate the dual- and single mechanism approaches in
both inflectional and derivational domains. The theoretical account is also
tested by implementing computational models with the goal of simulating
behavioral data in close detail.
Public Health Relevance Statement
Data not available.
NIH Spending Category
No NIH Spending Category available.
Project Terms
behavioral /social science research tagclinical researchcommunication behaviorcomputational neurosciencecomputer simulationhuman subjectlanguagememoryneural information processingphonologypsychological modelsreadingsemanticssyntax
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Publications
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