Contextual Effects on Spoken Word Processing: An Eye-Tracking Study of the Time Course of Tone and Vowel Activation in Mandarin

Lexical access is highly contextual. For example, vowel (rime) information is prioritized over tone in the lexical access of isolated words in Mandarin Chinese, but these roles are flipped in constraining contexts. The time course of these contextual effects remains unclear, and so here we tracked t...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inJournal of experimental psychology. Learning, memory, and cognition Vol. 49; no. 7; pp. 1145 - 1160
Main Authors Deng, Xizi, Farris-Trimble, Ashley, Yeung, H. Henny
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States American Psychological Association 01.07.2023
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Summary:Lexical access is highly contextual. For example, vowel (rime) information is prioritized over tone in the lexical access of isolated words in Mandarin Chinese, but these roles are flipped in constraining contexts. The time course of these contextual effects remains unclear, and so here we tracked the real-time eye gaze of native Mandarin speakers in a visual-world paradigm. While listening to a noun classifier, before the target noun was even uttered, gaze to the target noun was already greater than looking to phonologically unrelated distractors. Critically, there was also more distraction from a cohort competitor (tone information) than a segmental competitor (vowel information) in more semantically constraining contexts. Results confirm that phonological activation in Mandarin lexical access is highly sensitive to context, with tone taking priority over vowel information even before a target word is heard. Results suggest that phonological activation in real-time lexical access may be highly context-specific across languages.
ISSN:0278-7393
1939-1285
DOI:10.1037/xlm0001143