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Original Articles

The processing of root morphemes in Hebrew: Contrasting localist and distributed accounts

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Pages 169-206 | Published online: 05 Mar 2007

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Read on this site (8)

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Rachel Schiff, Michal Raveh & Avital Fighel. (2012) The Development of the Hebrew Mental Lexicon: When Morphological Representations Become Devoid of Their Meaning. Scientific Studies of Reading 16:5, pages 383-403.
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Gunna Funder Hansen. 2014. Handbook of Arabic Literacy. Handbook of Arabic Literacy 55 76 .
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Limor Kolan, Mark Leikin & Pienie Zwitserlood. (2011) Morphological processing and lexical access in speech production in Hebrew: Evidence from picture–word interference. Journal of Memory and Language 65:3, pages 286-298.
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Atira S. Bick, Ram Frost & Gadi Goelman. (2010) Imaging Implicit Morphological Processing: Evidence from Hebrew. Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience 22:9, pages 1955-1969.
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Hadas Velan & Ram Frost. (2009) Letter-transposition effects are not universal: The impact of transposing letters in Hebrew. Journal of Memory and Language 61:3, pages 285-302.
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Dorit RavidVital Geiger. (2009) Promoting morphological awareness in Hebrew-speaking grade-schoolers: An intervention study using linguistic humor. First Language 29:1, pages 81-112.
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Rachel Schiff, Michal Raveh & Shani Kahta. (2007) The developing mental lexicon: evidence from morphological priming of irregular Hebrew forms. Reading and Writing 21:7, pages 719-743.
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Ali IdrissiJean-François PrunetRenée Béland. (2008) On the Mental Representation of Arabic Roots. Linguistic Inquiry 39:2, pages 221-259.
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Atira Bick, Gadi Goelman & Ram Frost. (2008) Neural Correlates of Morphological Processes in Hebrew. Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience 20:3, pages 406-420.
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Jean-François Prunet. (2006) External Evidence and the Semitic Root. Morphology 16:1, pages 41-67.
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Ram Frost, Tamar Kugler, Avital Deutsch & Kenneth I. Forster. (2005) Orthographic Structure Versus Morphological Structure: Principles of Lexical Organization in a Given Language.. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition 31:6, pages 1293-1326.
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