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The role of character positional frequency on Chinese word learning during natural reading

The role of character positional frequency on Chinese word learning during natural reading
The role of character positional frequency on Chinese word learning during natural reading
Readers’ eye movements were recorded to examine the role of character positional frequency on Chinese lexical acquisition during reading and its possible modulation by word spacing. In Experiment 1, three types of pseudowords were constructed based on each character’s positional frequency, providing congruent, incongruent, and no positional word segmentation information. Each pseudoword was embedded into two sets of sentences, for the learning and the test phases. In the learning phase, half the participants read sentences in word-spaced format, and half in unspaced format. In the test phase, all participants read sentences in unspaced format. The results showed an inhibitory effect of character positional frequency upon the efficiency of word learning when processing incongruent pseudowords both in the learning and test phase, and also showed facilitatory effect of word spacing in the learning phase, but not at test. Most importantly, these two characteristics exerted independent influences on word segmentation. In Experiment 2, three analogous types of pseudowords were created whilst controlling for orthographic neighborhood size. The results of the two experiments were consistent, except that the effect of character positional frequency was absent in the test phase in Experiment 2. We argue that the positional frequency of a word’s constituent characters may influence the character-to-word assignment in a process that likely incorporates both lexical segmentation and identification.
1932-6203
1-24
Liang, Feifei
9b275f55-215c-421f-a974-858ba191caf6
Blythe, Hazel I.
51835633-e40b-4e8b-ae49-ad6b2f927f4c
Bai, Xuejun
6ab11c9c-39ac-4f1d-a1ec-b7a1e52bcc89
Yan, Guoli
ff7bdff5-923d-4d73-958a-a8e9e484a81a
Lin, Xi
cd7c6250-be3f-49ba-a11a-a599041c594e
Zang, Chuanli
558104ed-4ec2-48f7-b723-8bd025399803
Liversedge, Simon P.
3ebda3f3-d930-4f89-85d5-5654d8fe7dee
Liang, Feifei
9b275f55-215c-421f-a974-858ba191caf6
Blythe, Hazel I.
51835633-e40b-4e8b-ae49-ad6b2f927f4c
Bai, Xuejun
6ab11c9c-39ac-4f1d-a1ec-b7a1e52bcc89
Yan, Guoli
ff7bdff5-923d-4d73-958a-a8e9e484a81a
Lin, Xi
cd7c6250-be3f-49ba-a11a-a599041c594e
Zang, Chuanli
558104ed-4ec2-48f7-b723-8bd025399803
Liversedge, Simon P.
3ebda3f3-d930-4f89-85d5-5654d8fe7dee

Liang, Feifei, Blythe, Hazel I., Bai, Xuejun, Yan, Guoli, Lin, Xi, Zang, Chuanli and Liversedge, Simon P. (2017) The role of character positional frequency on Chinese word learning during natural reading. PLoS ONE, 12 (11), 1-24, [e0187656]. (doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0187656).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Readers’ eye movements were recorded to examine the role of character positional frequency on Chinese lexical acquisition during reading and its possible modulation by word spacing. In Experiment 1, three types of pseudowords were constructed based on each character’s positional frequency, providing congruent, incongruent, and no positional word segmentation information. Each pseudoword was embedded into two sets of sentences, for the learning and the test phases. In the learning phase, half the participants read sentences in word-spaced format, and half in unspaced format. In the test phase, all participants read sentences in unspaced format. The results showed an inhibitory effect of character positional frequency upon the efficiency of word learning when processing incongruent pseudowords both in the learning and test phase, and also showed facilitatory effect of word spacing in the learning phase, but not at test. Most importantly, these two characteristics exerted independent influences on word segmentation. In Experiment 2, three analogous types of pseudowords were created whilst controlling for orthographic neighborhood size. The results of the two experiments were consistent, except that the effect of character positional frequency was absent in the test phase in Experiment 2. We argue that the positional frequency of a word’s constituent characters may influence the character-to-word assignment in a process that likely incorporates both lexical segmentation and identification.

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Accepted/In Press date: 24 October 2017
e-pub ahead of print date: 14 November 2017
Published date: 2017

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 418122
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/418122
ISSN: 1932-6203
PURE UUID: 3791a1ae-c8fb-4f4c-9de3-fe35de6556d0

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Date deposited: 22 Feb 2018 17:30
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 18:30

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Contributors

Author: Feifei Liang
Author: Hazel I. Blythe
Author: Xuejun Bai
Author: Guoli Yan
Author: Xi Lin
Author: Chuanli Zang
Author: Simon P. Liversedge

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