大写德语单词对词汇获取的影响。

Psychological Research Pub Date : 2022-04-01 Epub Date: 2021-06-06 DOI:10.1007/s00426-021-01540-3
Melanie Labusch, Sonja A Kotz, Manuel Perea
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引用次数: 8

摘要

视觉词识别的主要模型假设词识别过程是由抽象的、大小写不变的单元驱动的(例如,table和table激活相同的抽象表示)。但是,这些模型是否需要修改以满足正字法的细微差别,比如在德语中,常见名词的第一个字母是大写的(例如,Buch[书]和Hund[狗],但blau[蓝色])?为了检验德语单词的首字母大写在词汇访问中的作用,我们选择了一个语义分类任务(“这个词是动物的名字吗?”)。在实验1中,我们比较了全小写和大写的德语单词(hund, buch, blau和hund, buch, blau)。结果显示,对于有首字母大写的动物名词,反应速度更快
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The impact of capitalized German words on lexical access.

Leading models of visual word recognition assume that the process of word identification is driven by abstract, case-invariant units (e.g., table and TABLE activate the same abstract representation). But do these models need to be modified to meet nuances of orthography as in German, where the first letter of common nouns is capitalized (e.g., Buch [book] and Hund [dog], but blau [blue])? To examine the role of initial capitalization of German words in lexical access, we chose a semantic categorization task ("is the word an animal name?"). In Experiment 1, we compared German words in all-lowercase vs. initial capitalization (hund, buch, blau vs. Hund, Buch, Blau). Results showed faster responses for animal nouns with initial capitalization (Hund < hund) and faster responses for lowercase non-nouns (blau < Blau). Surprisingly, we found faster responses for lowercase non-animal nouns (buch < Buch). As the latter difference could derive from task demands (i.e., buch does not follow German orthographic rules and requires a "no" response), we replaced the all-lowercase format with an orthographically legal all-uppercase format in Experiment 2. Results showed an advantage for all nouns with initial capitalization (Hund < HUND and Buch < BUCH). These findings clearly show that initial capitalization in German words constitutes an essential part of the words' representations and is used during lexical access. Thus, models of visual word recognition, primarily focused on English orthography, should be expanded to the idiosyncrasies of other Latin-based orthographies.

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