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Constraints of lexical tone on semantic activation in Chinese spoken word recognition
Authors:
Zhou, J., Shu Hua, Q.Y., Gaskell, G. & MARSLEN-WILSON, W.D.
Reference:
Acta Psychologica Sinica, 36(4), 379-392
Year of publication:
2004
CBU number:
5936
Abstract:
Constraints of lexical tones on semantic activation on the recognition of spoken words in Chinese were investigated in three cross-modal priming lexical decision experiments. In Experiments I and 2, disyllabic compound words that shared the same segmental templates but differed in lexical tones (eg tiao4 yeu4, jump, vs tiao2 yue1, treaty: numbers denote tone types) were used as auditory primes while words that were semantically related to one of the pairs were visually presented for lexical decision. The semantic primes and the tone mis-mismatched primes differed in tones of the first, the second, or both syllables. In Experiment 3, nonword tone-mismatched primes were created by changing the first or the second tones of semantic primes. The similarity between the original tones and the resulting tones was also manipulated. It was found that the appearance of significant priming effects for the tone-mismatch primes depended on lexical competition environment, the goodness of fit between input tones and underlying tones, and the constitutent position of mismatching tones. The results ae discussed in terms of how tonal information in speech input is mapped onto the lexicon, how tonal information is represented in the lexicon, and how tonal constraints on semantic activation are influenced by competition environment.
MRC Cognition and Brain Sciences Unit

