TY - JOUR
T1 - Two decades later
T2 - letter transpositions within and across morpheme boundaries in L1 and L2 speakers
AU - Kahraman, Hasibe
AU - Klrklcl, Bilal
AU - Beyersmann, Elisabeth
PY - 2025/1/17
Y1 - 2025/1/17
N2 - This study examined the influence of letter transpositions on morphological facilitation in L1 English and L1 Chinese-L2 English speakers. Morphological priming effects were investigated by comparing morphologically complex primes that either contained transposed-letters (TL) within the stem or across the morpheme boundary, relative to a substituted-letter (SL) control. Within two masked primed lexical decision experiments, the same stem targets were preceded by morphologically related, TL-within, SL-within, TL-across, SL-across, or unrelated primes. Reaction time analyses with morphologically intact primes revealed facilitation in both L1 and L2 English. In L1, TL-within priming was significant, while the magnitude of TL-across priming varied as a function of positional specific bigram frequency and spelling proficiency. In L2, TL-priming was entirely absent. These findings support models of complex word recognition that accommodate relative flexibility in letter position encoding.
AB - This study examined the influence of letter transpositions on morphological facilitation in L1 English and L1 Chinese-L2 English speakers. Morphological priming effects were investigated by comparing morphologically complex primes that either contained transposed-letters (TL) within the stem or across the morpheme boundary, relative to a substituted-letter (SL) control. Within two masked primed lexical decision experiments, the same stem targets were preceded by morphologically related, TL-within, SL-within, TL-across, SL-across, or unrelated primes. Reaction time analyses with morphologically intact primes revealed facilitation in both L1 and L2 English. In L1, TL-within priming was significant, while the magnitude of TL-across priming varied as a function of positional specific bigram frequency and spelling proficiency. In L2, TL-priming was entirely absent. These findings support models of complex word recognition that accommodate relative flexibility in letter position encoding.
KW - bilingualism
KW - individual differences
KW - morphological processing
KW - second language processing
KW - transposed-letter priming
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85215369568&partnerID=8YFLogxK
UR - http://purl.org/au-research/grants/arc/DE190100850
U2 - 10.1017/S1366728924001020
DO - 10.1017/S1366728924001020
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85215369568
SN - 1366-7289
JO - Bilingualism
JF - Bilingualism
ER -