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Flexible Parafoveal Encoding of Character Order Supports Word Predictability Effects in Chinese Reading: Evidence from Eye Movements

journal contribution
posted on 2020-04-20, 14:28 authored by Min Chang, Lisha Hao, Sainan Zhao, Lin Li, Kevin Paterson, Jingxin Wang

Several eye movement studies have revealed flexibility in the parafoveal processing of character order information in Chinese reading. In particular, studies show that processing a two-character word in a sentence benefits more from parafoveal preview of a nonword created by transposing rather than replacing its two characters. One issue that has not been investigated is whether the contextual predictability of the target word influences this processing of character order information. However, such a finding would provide novel evidence for an early influence of context on lexical processing in Chinese reading. Accordingly, we investigated this issue in an eye movement experiment using the boundary paradigm and sentences containing two-character target words with high or low contextual predictability. Prior to the reader’s gaze crossing an invisible boundary, each target word was shown normally (i.e., a valid preview) or with its two characters either transposed or replaced by unrelated characters to create invalid nonword previews. These invalid previews reverted to the target word once the reader’s gaze crossed the invisible boundary. The results showed larger preview benefits(i.e., a decrease in fixation times)for target words following transposed-character than substituted-character previews, revealing a transposed-character effect similar to that in previous research. In addition, a word predictability effect (shorter fixation times for words with high than low predictability) was observed following both valid and transposed-character previews, but not substituted-character previews. The findings therefore reveal that context can influence an early stage of lexical processing in Chinese reading during which character order is processed flexibly.

Funding

The research was supported by a grant from National Science Foundation of China to Jingxin Wang (81771823) and a 1000 Talents Visiting Professorship to Kevin Paterson.

History

Citation

Attention, Perception and Psychophysics (2020) In Press

Version

  • AM (Accepted Manuscript)

Published in

Attention, Perception and Psychophysics

Publisher

Psychonomic Society

issn

0031-5117

Acceptance date

2020-04-15

Copyright date

2020

Publisher version

TBA

Language

en

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