Event
Ava Creemers will be defending her dissertation proposal on Friday December 14 at 1pm. The defense will be held in the Linguistics Library.
Please see below for abstract and title.
(Working) Title: Morphological processing and the effects
of semantic transparencyAdvisor: David EmbickProposal Committee: Kathryn Schuler, Florian Schwarz,
Meredith Tamminga
The proposed dissertation aims to provide empirical evidence
for the theoretical construct of a ‘morpheme’ that is
independent of semantic and phonological overlap.
Specifically, the dissertation investigates ‘irregular
word-formation processes’ by looking at multi-morphemic
words that are semantically opaque. These words are crucial
to test predictions of different models of lexical access,
as they allow us to investigate whether morphological
processing occurs in the absence of semantic overlap or
interactions. Traditionally, these irregular words have been
argued to be memorized in their full form in the mental
lexicon (cf. Aronoff 1976; Bloomfield 1933; Chomsky 1965;
Jackendoff 1997). However, preliminary results on opaque
Dutch prefixed verbs presented in the dissertation are in
line with a Full-Decomposition view of the lexicon (Stockall
and Marantz 2006; Taft 1979; Taft and Forster 1975; see also
Embick and Marantz 2005), providing evidence for the view
that morphologically complex words are derived syntactically
by the grammar from their constituent morphemes (Embick 2015).
Building on the extensive prior literature from both
theoretical linguistics and experimental psychology, my
thesis takes the insights from linguistic theories to probe
questions about morphological relatedness using an auditory
primed lexical decision paradigm. In particular, the
dissertation investigates the processing of the following
types of words: (i) Dutch prefixed verbs, which may differ
in meaning relatedness between the stem and the complex verb
from fully transparent (e.g., aanbieden ‘offer’) to fully
opaque (e.g., verbieden ‘forbid’, with the stem bieden
‘offer’); (ii) English suffixed words like treatment and
its relation to a pseudo-derived word like pigment; and
(iii) compound words, which range from fully transparent
(e.g., bedroom), to partially opaque (strawberry or
staircase), to fully opaque (deadline). Together, these case
studies provide novel data that investigate how (putative)
multi-morphemic words are accessed and represented in the
mental lexicon during auditory word recognition.