Kevin K.H. Chung , Xiuhong Tong , Phil D. Liu , Catherine McBride-Chang , Xiangzhi Meng
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引用次数: 30
摘要
本研究的目的是研究汉语化合物在57 ms短时间内的形态结构加工。在一项涉及汉语复合词的决策任务中,对16名香港中文大学生进行视觉词汇决策,记录了事件相关电位。本研究只纳入了配位复合结构范畴内的词。在这种复合词结构中,构成复合词的两个语素同等重要,类似于英语中的短语“In and out”,其中“In”和“out”都不能被认为是复合词的词头或修饰语;这两种语素在传递意义时同等重要。虽然在这个短SOA中复制了经典的N400语义启动效应,但也获得了一个早期的P250组件,该组件被认为反映了语义信息处理过程中语义记忆网络的激活。形态学结构效应仅在P250成分中存在,说明在汉语复合词加工过程中,形态学结构可能自动影响语义信息加工。
The processing of morphological structure information in Chinese coordinative compounds: An event-related potential study
The aim of this study was to investigate the morphological structure processing of Chinese compounds at short SOAs of 57 ms. Event-related potentials were recorded while 16 Hong Kong Chinese university students were instructed to make visual lexical decisions in a decision-making task involving Chinese compound words. Only words in the category of the coordinative compounding structure were included in the present study. In this compounding structure, both morphemes comprising the compound word are of equal importance, similar to the phrase “in-and-out” in English, where neither “in” nor “out” can be considered the head or modifier in the compound; both morphemes are of equal weight in communicating meaning. While the classic N400 semantic priming effect was replicated at this short SOA, an earlier P250 component, suggested to reflect semantic memory network activation during semantic information processing, was also obtained. The morphological structure effect was only found in the P250 component, suggesting that morphological structure may automatically influence the semantic information processing during Chinese compound word processing.
期刊介绍:
An international multidisciplinary journal devoted to fundamental research in the brain sciences.
Brain Research publishes papers reporting interdisciplinary investigations of nervous system structure and function that are of general interest to the international community of neuroscientists. As is evident from the journals name, its scope is broad, ranging from cellular and molecular studies through systems neuroscience, cognition and disease. Invited reviews are also published; suggestions for and inquiries about potential reviews are welcomed.
With the appearance of the final issue of the 2011 subscription, Vol. 67/1-2 (24 June 2011), Brain Research Reviews has ceased publication as a distinct journal separate from Brain Research. Review articles accepted for Brain Research are now published in that journal.