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  1. The meaning of the -er suffix.Joseph J. Dalezman & Ruth E. Knight - 1979 - Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 13 (1):27-30.
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  • Lexical access and inflectional morphology.Alfonso Caramazza, Alessandro Laudanna & Cristina Romani - 1988 - Cognition 28 (3):297-332.
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  • Will cognition survive?John Morton - 1981 - Cognition 10 (1-3):227-234.
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  • Priming is not all bias: Commentary on Ratcliff and McKoon (1997).Jeffrey S. Bowers - 1999 - Psychological Review 106 (3):582-596.
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  • Making up materials is a confounded nuisance, or: Will we able to run any psycholinguistic experiments at all in 1990?Anne Cutler - 1980 - Cognition 10 (1-3):65-70.
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  • Structure in auditory word recognition.Lyn Frazier - 1987 - Cognition 25 (1-2):157-187.
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  • Use of derivational morphology during reading.Andrea Tyler & William Nagy - 1990 - Cognition 36 (1):17-34.
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  • Identity and similarity factors in repetition blindness: implications for lexical processing.Doriana Chialant & Alfonso Caramazza - 1997 - Cognition 63 (1):79-119.
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  • Masked repetition priming: Lexical activation or novel memory trace?Kenneth Forster, Jill Booker, Daniel L. Schacter & Christopher Davis - 1990 - Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 28 (4):341-345.
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  • Remembering plurals: Unit of coding and form of coding during serial recall.Hugo Van Der Molen & John Morton - 1979 - Cognition 7 (1):35-47.
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  • Can people strategically control the encoding and retrieval of some morphologic and typographic details of words?Jerwen Jou & Hector M. Cortes - 2012 - Consciousness and Cognition 21 (3):1280-1297.
    This study investigated whether the encoding and retrieval of plurality information and letter-case information of words in recognition memory can be inhibited. Response-deadline experiments using single words have indicted a controlled processing mode, whereas studies using meaningful sentences have indicated an automatic mode of processing plurality information. Two similar opposing views have existed on the processing of letter-case information. The abstractionist view contends that we retain the abstract lexical information and discard the superficial perceptual case information. The proceduralist view holds (...)
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