4.5 Article

Functional orthographic units in Chinese character reading: Are there abstract radical identities?

Journal

PSYCHONOMIC BULLETIN & REVIEW
Volume 28, Issue 2, Pages 610-623

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.3758/s13423-020-01828-2

Keywords

Orthography; Reading; Visual word recognition; Psycholinguistics

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This research shows that the components of Chinese characters serve as processing units in reading, with abstract radical identities (ARIs) unifying multiple form-specific character components. Experimental results provide evidence for the existence of ARIs in Chinese characters.
Previous research has shown that the components of Chinese characters (e.g., semantic components, phonetic components, and radicals) serve as processing units in reading. One outstanding question concerns the existence of amodal orthographic representations that unify multiple, form-specific character components, similar to the abstract letter identities (ALIs) that unify case-specific letter forms (A/a) in Roman script. Although Chinese does not have case, a subset of semantic radicals have multiple forms (e.g., (sic) are both water radicals), allowing for a test of the existence of Radical Identities (ARIs) that unify the multiple forms. In Experiment 1, a visual same-different judgement task was used to detect the presence of ARI representations. Evidence for ARIs was provided by the finding that radical pairs with different forms but the same radical identity were judged to be visually different more slowly than matched pairs of different forms with different radical identities. In Experiment 2, we evaluated ARI effects in real character reading. A lexical decision priming task compared prime-target character pairs containing radicals with the same identity but different forms (e.g.,) with matched prime-target character pairs with unrelated radicals (e.g., (sic)). Inhibitory priming was observed only in the same-identity radical condition compared with the unrelated condition. These combined results provide, for the first time, evidence of format-free representations of orthographic units in Chinese characters-abstract radical identities (ARIs).

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