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Second Language Proficiency Modulates the Dependency of Bilingual Language Control on Domain-General Cognitive Control
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In: Front Psychol (2022)
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Foveal and parafoveal processing of Chinese three-character idioms in reading
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Phonological Coding during Sentence Reading in Chinese Deaf Readers: An Eye-Tracking Study
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Eye Movements of Developing Chinese Readers: Effects of Word Frequency and Predictability
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Flexibility in the Perceptual Span during Reading: Evidence from Mongolian
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Eye movements reveal delayed use of construction-based pragmatic information during online sentence reading: A case of Chinese Lian…dou Construction
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Word skipping in Chinese reading: The role of high-frequency preview and syntactic felicity
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The influence of foveal lexical processing load on parafoveal preview and saccadic targeting during Chinese reading
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Reading skill modulates the effect of parafoveal distractors on foveal lexical decision in deaf students
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Eye Movements Reveal Delayed Use of Construction-Based Pragmatic Information During Online Sentence Reading: A Case of Chinese Lian…dou Construction
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Effects of Implicit Prosody and Semantic Bias on the Resolution of Ambiguous Chinese Phrases
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Word Skipping in Chinese Reading: The Role of High-Frequency Preview and Syntactic Felicity
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Abstract:
Two experiments are reported to investigate whether Chinese readers skip a high-frequency preview word without taking the syntax of the sentence context into account. In Experiment 1, we manipulated target word syntactic category, frequency, and preview using the boundary paradigm (Rayner, 1975). For high-frequency verb targets, there were identity and pseudocharacter previews alongside a low-frequency noun preview. For low-frequency verb targets, there were identity and pseudocharacter previews alongside a high-frequency noun preview. Results showed that for high-frequency targets, skipping rates were higher for identical previews compared with the syntactically infelicitous alternative low-frequency preview and pseudocharacter previews, however for low-frequency targets, skipping rates were higher for high-frequency previews (even when they were syntactically infelicitous) compared with the other 2 previews. Furthermore, readers were more likely to skip the target when they had a high-frequency, syntactically felicitous preview compared to a high-frequency, syntactically infelicitous preview. The pattern of felicity effects was statistically robust when readers launched saccades from near the target. In Experiment 2, we assessed whether display change awareness influenced the patterns of results in Experiment 1. Results showed that the overall patterns held in Experiment 2 regardless of some readers being more likely to be aware of the display change than others. These results suggest that decisions to skip a word in Chinese reading are primarily based on parafoveal word familiarity, though the syntactic felicity of a parafoveal word also exerts a robust influence for high-frequency previews.
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Keyword:
Research Articles
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URL: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31246059 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7115127/ https://doi.org/10.1037/xlm0000738
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The morphosyntactic structure of compound words influences parafoveal processing in Chinese reading
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Skipping of the very-high-frequency structural particle de (的) in Chinese reading
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The morphosyntactic structure of compound words influences parafoveal processing in Chinese reading
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Effects of Irrelevant Background Speech on Eye Movements during Reading.
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The role of character positional frequency on Chinese word learning during natural reading
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The role of character positional frequency on Chinese word learning during natural reading
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The role of character positional frequency on Chinese word learning during natural reading
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