Phonological recovery during Chinese sentence reading: effects of rime and tone

Yan Ming, Yiu Kei TSANG, Jinger Pan*

*Corresponding author for this work

    Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articlepeer-review

    1 Citation (Scopus)

    Abstract

    The present study tested the activation of different phonological units of Chinese characters during silent sentence reading. Fifty-five participants were tested in an eye-tracking experiment. A highly predictable target character in each experimental sentence was replaced by four types of substitutes (i.e. no-violation, tone-violation, rime-violation, and double-violation). The participants exhibited a shorter total reading time in the no-violation and tone-violation conditions than in the double-violation baseline condition, whereas the rime-violation condition did not differ from the baseline. Moreover, the participants did not benefit from tonal information in addition to syllable-level phonological overlap. Our findings are consistent with a notion of late phonological activation in Chinese, and therefore suggest a direct route of lexical activation bypassing phonological mediation during visual word recognition.
    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)501-512
    Number of pages12
    JournalLanguage, Cognition and Neuroscience
    Volume39
    Issue number4
    Early online date21 Mar 2024
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - Apr 2024

    User-Defined Keywords

    • Chinese
    • Phonology
    • reading
    • rime
    • tone
    • Phonology; rime; tone; Chinese; reading

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