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    Frequency effects in the production of Dutch deverbal adjectives and inflected verbs. 
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    • Frequency effects in the production of Dutch deverbal adjectives and inflected verbs.
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    • Wolfson Institute of Preventive Medicine
    • Centre for Psychiatry
    • Frequency effects in the production of Dutch deverbal adjectives and inflected verbs.
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    Frequency effects in the production of Dutch deverbal adjectives and inflected verbs.

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    Published Version
    Embargoed until: 2100-01-01
    Reason: Publisher won't allow use of VoR
    Volume
    4
    Pagination
    683 - 715
    Journal
    Language and Cognitive Processes
    Issue
    26
    Metadata
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    Abstract
    In two experiments, we studied the role of frequency information in the production of deverbal adjectives and inflected verbs in Dutch. Naming latencies were triggered in a position-response association task and analysed using stepwise mixed-effects modelling, with subject and word as crossed random effects. The production latency of deverbal adjectives was affected by the cumulative frequencies of their verbal stems, arguing for decomposition and against full listing. However, for the inflected verbs, there was an inhibitory effect of Inflectional Entropy, and a nonlinear effect of Lemma Frequency. Additional effects of Position-specific Neighbourhood Density and Cohort Entropy in both types of words underline the importance of paradigmatic relations in the mental lexicon. Taken together, the data suggest that the word-form level does neither contain full forms nor strictly separated morphemes, but rather morphemes with links to phonologically and - in case of inflected verbs - morphologically related word form.
    Authors
    Bien, H; Baayen, RH; Levelt, WJM
    URI
    http://qmro.qmul.ac.uk/xmlui/handle/123456789/13638
    Collections
    • Centre for Psychiatry [662]
    Licence information
    • “The final publication is available at http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/01690965.2010.511475”
    Copyright statements
    © 2010, Taylor & Francis
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