4.7 Article

The role of orthographic and phonological processing during reading Chinese sentences: Evidence from eye movements

Journal

FRONTIERS IN PSYCHOLOGY
Volume 14, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2023.1148815

Keywords

orthography; phonology; misspelled characters; eye movements; Chinese reading

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This study investigated the role of phonological and orthographic processing in Chinese reading. The results showed that phonological errors caused more disruptions in the early and later stages of word recognition. Orthographic errors caused equal disruptions in the early stage but more disruptions later on. This suggests that orthography plays a dominant role in Chinese word recognition, while phonology has a weaker and more limited role.
The role of phonological and orthographic processing and their time course during lexical processing and sentence reading remain controversial. By adopting a misspelled-characters disruption paradigm and eye-tracking technique, we manipulated the writing for the first characters of two-character target words to investigate the relative role of orthographic and phonological processing on word recognition in Chinese reading. There are four conditions: (a) correct character, (b) misspelled character with a stroke missing, (c) misspelled homographic character, and (d) misspelled homophonic character. The results showed that homophonic errors caused more disruptions than other conditions in the early (first-pass reading times) and later (total reading time) stages of lexical processing during Chinese reading. Homographic errors and omitted stroke errors lead to equal disruptions at the early stage of word recognition, but homographic errors cause more disruptions at the later stage. These results suggest that orthography plays a dominant role in word recognition during Chinese reading, whereas phonology plays a weaker and more limited role. The direct access and dual-rote hypothesis may well explain the mechanism of lexical processing in Chinese reading.

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