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CHAPTER FIVE Word Recognition III : Morphological Processing

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Kathleen Rastle

The past 50 years of research on visual word recognition has been dominated by the view that the primary challenge of reading is to decode the printed word to a spoken language representation. Thousands of articles have been devoted to understanding how skilled readers compute sound‐based (phonological) representations from printed words (e.g., Coltheart, Rastle, Perry, Langdon, & Ziegler, 2001; Plaut, McClelland, Seidenberg & Patterson, 1996), how phonological decoding constrains word identification (e.g., Lukatela & Turvey, 1994), the time‐course of phonological decoding (e.g., Rastle & Brysbaert, 2006; Rayner et al., 1995), and whether it is obligatory (e.g., Frost, 1998). Likewise, research on learning to read has focused on how phonological decoding ability influences reading success (e.g., Melby‐ Lervåg, Lyster, & Hulme, 2012), how inconsistency in the relationship between spellings and sounds affects learning to read (e.g., Seymour, Aro & Erskine, 2003), and how children should be taught to relate visual symbols to sounds (see e.g., Castles, Rastle, & Nation, 2018). This body of research has demonstrated unambiguously that the computation of phonological representations plays a vital role in skilled reading and learning to read (see Brysbaert, this volume).

Far less attention has been given to the role of morphological information in skilled reading and reading acquisition. Morphemes are the smallest unit of meaning, typically comprising stems (e.g., luck) and affixes (including prefixes, e.g., un‐, and suffixes, e.g., ‐y). The vast majority of words in English and in other languages are built by combining a small number of stems with other stems (e.g., potluck) or with prefixes and suffixes (e.g., unlucky, unluckiest, luckily). It is obvious that an efficient reading system should treat these different words as similar to one another, and this was recognized in some of the earliest work in modern reading research (Taft & Forster, 1975). However, it was not until many years later that the field began to understand how morphological information is analysed in visual word recognition, why these processes are important in skilled reading, and how this information is learned. This chapter describes recent advances in our understanding of these questions and identifies questions for future research.

The Science of Reading

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