A developmental perspective on morphological processing in the flankers task.

J Exp Child Psychol

Laboratoire de Psychologie Cognitive, CNRS, and Aix-Marseille University, 13007 Marseille, France; Institute for Language Communication and the Brain, Aix-Marseille University, 13007 Marseille, France.

Published: September 2022

AI Article Synopsis

  • Recent research indicates that recognizing target words is improved by related flanker words, and this study investigates how this effect develops in children and adults using the flankers task.
  • The study involved two groups of primary school children (around ages 8 and 10) and adults, examining how different relationships (stems vs. derivatives) between target and flanker words affected recognition.
  • Results showed that while adults benefited from morphological relatedness, the two groups of children did not, suggesting that understanding of morphological processing grows over several years and that the complexity of word forms influences younger children's abilities.

Article Abstract

Recent research with adult participants using the flankers task has shown that the recognition of central target words is facilitated by the presence of morphologically related flanker words. Here we explored the development of such morphological flanker effects in two groups of primary school children (average ages = 8 years 6 months and 10 years 3 months) and a group of adult participants. We examined effects of a transparent morphological relation in two conditions: one where the target was the stem and flankers were derivations (e.g., farmer farm farmer) and the other where the flankers were stems and the target was the derived form (e.g., farm farmer farm). Morphological flanker effects were compared with repetition flanker effects with the same set of stimuli (e.g., farm farm farm; farmer farmer farmer), and effects of related flankers were contrasted with the appropriate unrelated flankers. Results revealed no significant effect of morphological relatedness in the two groups of children and a significant effect in the adult group, but only for suffixed targets and stem flankers. Repetition effects for stem targets were found across all groups, whereas repetition effects for suffixed targets were found only in the older children and adults. These results show that morphological processing, in a context involving multiple words presented simultaneously, takes several years to develop and that morphological complexity (stem vs. derived) is a limiting factor for repetition effects in the flankers task with young children.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jecp.2022.105448DOI Listing

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