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A Transposed-Word Effect Across Space and Time: Evidence from Chinese

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journal contribution
posted on 2021-10-04, 15:02 authored by Zhiwei Liu, Yan Li, Michael Cutter, Kevin Paterson, Jingxin Wang

 A compelling account of the reading process holds that words must be encoded serially, and so recognized strictly one at a time in the order they are encountered. However, this view has been challenged recently, based on evidence showing that readers sometimes fail to notice when adjacent words appear in ungrammatical order. This is argued to show that words are actually encoded in parallel, so that multiple words are processed simultaneously and therefore might be recognized out of order. We tested this account in an experiment in Chinese with 112 skilled readers, employing methods used previously to demonstrate flexible word order processing, and display techniques that allowed or disallowed the parallel encoding of words. The results provided evidence for flexible word order processing even when words must be encoded serially. Accordingly, while word order can be processed flexibly during reading, this need not entail that words are encoded in parallel. 

Funding

National Science Foundation of China to Jingxin Wang (81771823)

History

Author affiliation

Department of Neuroscience, Psychology and Behaviour, College of Life Sciences

Version

  • AM (Accepted Manuscript)

Published in

Cognition

Volume

218

Publisher

Elsevier

issn

0010-0277

Acceptance date

2021-09-28

Copyright date

2021

Available date

2022-10-08

Language

en

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