Pupillary Responses to Pseudowords With Different Morphological and Imageability Features

Author:

Lázaro Miguel1,García-Gutiérrez Ana1,García Lorena1,Hinojosa José Antonio1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Experimental Psychology, Complutense University of Madrid, Spain

Abstract

Abstract: In this study, we explored the role of morphology and imageability in pseudoword processing while recording pupillary responses in a lexical decision task that included polymorphemic (“footbalist”), suffixed (“smopify”), and simple pseudowords (“gresmor”), which also varied in imageability. The behavioral results of the mixed-model analyses showed longer latencies and higher error rates for highly imageable polymorphemic pseudowords relative to suffixed pseudowords. Suffixed pseudowords also generated longer latencies than simple pseudowords. The effect of imageability reached significance in these comparisons. With respect to the physiological data, significant differences emerged in the peak latencies between polymorphemic and the other two types of pseudowords, simple and suffixed. Overall findings were interpreted to index processing costs associated with the inhibition of word-like responses in morphological pseudowords while highlighting the intrinsic relationship between morphological and semantic processing. Physiological results allow us to associate for the first-time changes in the pupils to pseudowords processing.

Publisher

Hogrefe Publishing Group

Subject

Physiology,Neuropsychology and Physiological Psychology,General Neuroscience

Reference32 articles.

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2. Beatty, J. & Lucero-Wagoner, B. (2000). The pupillary system. In J. T. Cacioppo, L. G. Tassinary, & G. G. Berntson (Eds.), Handbook of psychophysiology (Vol. 2, pp. 142–162). Cambridge University Press.

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4. Morphological segmentation of nonwords in individuals with acquired dyslexia

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1. Mind the suffix: Pseudoword processing in children and adults;Journal of Experimental Child Psychology;2024-09

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