Character decomposition and transposition processes of Chinese compound words in rapid serial visual presentation

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Abstract

Character order information is encoded at the initial stage of Chinese word processing, however, its time course remains underspecified. In this study, we assess the exact time course of the character decomposition and transposition processes of two-character Chinese compound words (canonical, transposed, or reversible words) compared with pseudowords using dual-target rapid serial visual presentation (RSVP) of stimuli appearing at 30 ms per character with no inter-stimulus interval. The results indicate that Chinese readers can identify words with character transpositions in rapid succession; however, a transposition cost is involved in identifying transposed words compared to canonical words. In RSVP reading, character order of words is more likely to be reversed during the period from 30 to 180 ms for canonical and reversible words, but the period from 30 to 240 ms for transposed words. Taken together, the findings demonstrate that the holistic representation of the base word is activated, however, the order of the two constituent characters is not strictly processed during the very early stage of visual word processing.

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Cao, H. W., Yang, K. Y., & Yan, H. M. (2017). Character decomposition and transposition processes of Chinese compound words in rapid serial visual presentation. Frontiers in Psychology, 8(MAR). https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2017.00483

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