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Jianping Xiong; Ping Ju; Yongqing Hou; Antao Chen – Reading and Writing: An Interdisciplinary Journal, 2025
Inhibitory control ability may affect the orthographic neighborhood size (ONS) effect by inhibiting the semantic activation of neighbors. However, few studies have explored whether and how inhibitory control plays a role in the ONS effect on recognition of Chinese words. This study screened individuals with high and low inhibitory control…
Descriptors: Inhibition, Chinese, Vocabulary Development, Orthographic Symbols
Tianlin Wang; Matthew J. Cooper Borkenhagen; Madison Barker; Mark S. Seidenberg – Grantee Submission, 2022
Many characters in written Chinese incorporate components (radicals) that provide cues to meaning. These cues are often partial, and some are misleading because they are unrelated to the character's meaning. Previous studies have shown that radicals influence the reader's processing of the characters in which they occur (e.g., Feldman and Siok in…
Descriptors: Chinese, Orthographic Symbols, Misconceptions, Semantics
Tianlin Wang; Matt Cooper Borkenhagen; Madison Barker; Mark S. Seidenberg – Reading and Writing: An Interdisciplinary Journal, 2022
Many characters in written Chinese incorporate components (radicals) that provide cues to meaning. These cues are often partial, and some are misleading because they are unrelated to the character's meaning. Previous studies have shown that radicals influence the reader's processing of the characters in which they occur (e.g., Feldman and Siok in…
Descriptors: Chinese, Orthographic Symbols, Misconceptions, Semantics
Ruomeng Zhu; Mateo Obregón; Hamutal Kreiner; Richard Shillcock – Scientific Studies of Reading, 2024
Purpose: We compare right-to-left and left-to-right orthographies to test the theory, derived from studying the latter, that small temporal asynchronies between the two eyes at the beginning and end of every fixation favor ocular prevalence for the left eye in the left hemifield and the right eye in the right hemifield. Ocular prevalence is the…
Descriptors: Reading Processes, Eye Movements, Orthographic Symbols, Arabic
Liu, Yanchi; Zhang, Shijia; Zhang, Yuman; Diao, Jiangdong; Cheng, Qiuping; Gao, Ruixiang; Mo, Lei – Reading and Writing: An Interdisciplinary Journal, 2023
Four experiments were designed to investigate the possible effect of orthographic neighborhood frequency (NF) on Chinese character recognition. Orthographic neighbors were operated under two conditions: stroke based and radical based. With the lexical decision and repeated-matching tasks adopted, the results showed an inhibitory NF effect on…
Descriptors: Chinese, Orthographic Symbols, Recognition (Psychology), Task Analysis
Jelena Markovic; Garvin Brod; Leonard Tetzlaff – Reading and Writing: An Interdisciplinary Journal, 2025
Orthographic knowledge (i.e., the knowledge of conventions of a written language) has been identified as a predictor of both basic and higher-level reading processes, however, mostly examined in a cross-sectional design. It remains unclear, whether and how orthographic knowledge contributes uniquely in explaining differences in the acquisition of…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Orthographic Symbols, Reading Processes, German
Stephen J. Lupker; Giacomo Spinelli – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2023
Rastle et al. (2004) reported that true (e.g., walker) and pseudo (e.g., corner) multi-morphemic words prime their stem words more than form controls do (e.g., brothel priming BROTH) in a masked priming lexical decision task. This data pattern has led a number of models to propose that both of the former word types are "decomposed" into…
Descriptors: Models, Morphemes, Priming, Vocabulary
Cheng-Yu Hsieh; Marco Marelli; Kathleen Rastle – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2024
Most printed Chinese words are compounds built from the combination of meaningful characters. Yet, there is a poor understanding of how individual characters contribute to the recognition of compounds. Using a megastudy of Chinese word recognition (Tse et al., 2017), we examined how the lexical decision of existing and novel Chinese compounds was…
Descriptors: Semantics, Orthographic Symbols, Chinese, Reading Processes
Shang Jiang – Journal of Psycholinguistic Research, 2024
It has been well documented that formulaic language (such as collocations; e.g., "provide information") enjoys a processing advantage over novel language (e.g., "compare information"). In natural language use, however, many formulaic sequences are often inserted with words intervening in between the individual constituents…
Descriptors: Phrase Structure, Language Processing, Psycholinguistics, Orthographic Symbols
Tibi, Sana; Edwards, Ashley A.; Kim, Young-Suk Grace; Schatschneider, Christopher; Boudelaa, Sami – Scientific Studies of Reading, 2022
Studies have suggested that multiple features influence letter knowledge across different orthographies. Arabic offers a unique opportunity to investigate the relations of letter properties on letter knowledge, but research on Arabic letter knowledge is scarce. This study was designed to investigate (a) letter frequency, (b) letter sequence, (c)…
Descriptors: Arabic, Reading Processes, Alphabets, Orthographic Symbols
Sungbong Bae; Hye K. Pae; Kwangoh Yi – Reading and Writing: An Interdisciplinary Journal, 2024
While the theoretical models of morphological processing in Roman alphabets indicate prelexical activation, a model established in Korean suggests postlexical activation. To extend the model of Korean morphological processing, this study examined within-scriptal (Hangul-Hangul prime-target pairs) and cross-scriptal (Hanja-Hangul prime-target…
Descriptors: Korean, Word Recognition, Morphology (Languages), Written Language
Wegener, Signy; Wang, Hua-Chen; Beyersmann, Elisabeth; Reichle, Erik D.; Nation, Kate; Castles, Anne – Reading Research Quarterly, 2023
Distributing study opportunities over time typically improves the retention of verbal material compared to consecutive study trials, yet little is known about the influence of temporal spacing on orthographic form learning specifically. This experiment sought to obtain and compare estimates of the magnitude of the spacing effect on written word…
Descriptors: Orthographic Symbols, Written Language, Sentences, Intervals
Chuanli Zang; Ying Fu; Hong Du; Xuejun Bai; Guoli Yan; Simon P. Liversedge – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2024
Arguably, the most contentious debate in the field of eye movement control in reading has centered on whether words are lexically processed serially or in parallel during reading. Chinese is character-based and unspaced, meaning the issue of how lexical processing is operationalized across potentially ambiguous, multicharacter strings is not…
Descriptors: Chinese, Reading Processes, Language Processing, Phrase Structure
Yang, Huilan; Taikh, Alexander; Lupker, Stephen J. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2022
Using two-character Chinese word targets in a masked priming lexical-decision task, Gu and colleagues (2015) demonstrated a significant transposed character (TC) priming effect. More importantly, the priming effect was the same size for single-morpheme words and multiple-morpheme words, suggesting that TC priming effects are not influenced by…
Descriptors: Chinese, Morphology (Languages), Priming, Orthographic Symbols
Jianyi Liu; Tengwen Fan; Yan Chen; Jingjing Zhao – npj Science of Learning, 2023
Statistical learning (SL) plays a key role in literacy acquisition. Studies have increasingly revealed the influence of distributional statistical properties of words on visual word processing, including the effects of word frequency (lexical level) and mappings between orthography, phonology, and semantics (sub-lexical level). However, there has…
Descriptors: Semantics, Brain Hemisphere Functions, Language Processing, Reading Processes