Article published In: The Mental Lexicon
Vol. 4:1 (2009) ► pp.41–76
Does s now man prime plastic snow?
The effect of constituent position in using relational information during the interpretation of modifier-noun phrases
Published online: 24 April 2009
https://doi.org/10.1075/ml.4.1.03gag
https://doi.org/10.1075/ml.4.1.03gag
Three experiments were conducted to determine the extent to which relational and morphosyntactic information influence the processing of modifier-noun phrases. Processing of the target was faster when the shared constituent was in the same position in both the prime and the target, regardless of whether the relation was the same or different. In contrast, relation priming was contingent on the morphosyntactic role of the shared constituent; repeating the relation with the constituent in a different morphosyntactic role did not speed processing of the target (Experiments 1–3) whereas repeating the relation with the constituent in the same role did speed processing (Experiments 3). These results suggest that conceptual information is accessed in light of the constituent’s particular morphosyntactic role.
Keywords: noun phrases, relation priming, compounds, conceptual combination, morphology
Cited by (23)
Cited by 23 other publications
Cheng, Gong & Hai Xu
Gagné, Christina L., Leah Auch & Thomas L. Spalding
Hsieh, Cheng-Yu, Marco Marelli & Kathleen Rastle
Benjamin, Shaina & Daniel Schmidtke
Cruz, Karen Pérez, Chelsa Patel, Jazlynn Steinbach, Mohamed Barre, Holly Kibbins, Dixie Wong, Alexander Taikh, Christina L. Gagné & Thomas L. Spalding
2022. Is meaning construction attempted during the processing of pseudo-compounds?. The Mental Lexicon 17:2 ► pp. 277 ff.
Günther, Fritz & Marco Marelli
Gagné, Christina L., Thomas L. Spalding & Daniel Schmidtke
Cui, Lei, Fengjiao Cong, Jue Wang, Wenxin Zhang, Yuwei Zheng & Jukka Hyönä
Gagné, Christina L., Thomas L. Spalding, Kelly A. Nisbet & Caitrin Armstrong
Schmidtke, Daniel, Christina L. Gagné, Victor Kuperman, Thomas L. Spalding & Benjamin V. Tucker
Schmidtke, Daniel, Christina L. Gagné, Victor Kuperman & Thomas L. Spalding
Marelli, Marco, Christina L. Gagné & Thomas L. Spalding
Bell, Melanie J. & Martin Schäfer
Schmidtke, Daniel, Victor Kuperman, Christina L. Gagné & Thomas L. Spalding
Jia, Xiaofei, Suiping Wang, Bao Zhang & John X. Zhang
Marelli, Marco & Claudio Luzzatti
Gagné, Christina L. & Thomas L. Spalding
Gagné, Christina L. & Thomas L. Spalding
Gagné, Christina L. & Thomas L. Spalding
Gagné, Christina L. & Thomas L. Spalding
Ji, Hongbo, Christina L. Gagné & Thomas L. Spalding
Spalding, Thomas L. & Christina L. Gagné
Spalding, Thomas L. & Christina L. Gagné
2014. Relational diversity affects ease of processing even for opaque English compounds. The Mental Lexicon 9:1 ► pp. 48 ff.
This list is based on CrossRef data as of 27 november 2025. Please note that it may not be complete. Sources presented here have been supplied by the respective publishers. Any errors therein should be reported to them.
