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DNA Sequence Recognition by DNA Primase Using High-Throughput Primase Profiling
08:04

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Published on: October 8, 2019

Past tense route priming.

Emily R Cohen-Shikora1, David A Balota

  • 1Department of Psychology, Washington University in St. Louis, MO 63130, United States. ecohensh@wustl.edu

Cognition
|January 8, 2013
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Past tense verb processing can be influenced by the context of words presented. This study shows that both regular and irregular verb forms are processed faster when presented in a context of similar verb types.

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Area of Science:

  • Psycholinguistics
  • Cognitive Psychology
  • Linguistics

Background:

  • Past tense verb inflection involves both lexical (whole word) and rule-based (morphological) processes.
  • Understanding how these distinct processes are utilized and influenced by context is crucial for models of language production.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To investigate whether experimental list context can locally bias lexical versus rule-based processes in past tense verb inflection.
  • To determine if this contextual bias is dependent on phonological cues.

Main Methods:

  • Experiment 1: Participants (younger and older adults) performed a past tense inflection task with blocks of regular or irregular verbs.
  • Experiment 2: The task was repeated using nonwords, with and without a "-ED" suffix, to isolate phonological effects.

Main Results:

  • A cross-over interaction was observed in response latencies for both age groups in Experiment 1.
  • Regular verbs were inflected faster in a regular context, and irregular verbs faster in an irregular context.
  • The contextual effect was eliminated when phonological cues were manipulated in Experiment 2.

Conclusions:

  • Distinct processes for past tense verb production can be locally biased by list context.
  • This route priming effect is not driven by phonological priming, suggesting a reliance on lexical or morphological information.