Dissociation of tone and vowel processing in Mandarin idioms

Using event‐related potentials, this study measured the access of suprasegmental (tone) and segmental (vowel) information in spoken word recognition with Mandarin idioms. Participants performed a delayed‐response acceptability task, in which they judged the correctness of the last word of each idiom...

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Veröffentlicht in:Psychophysiology 2012-09, Vol.49 (9), p.1179-1190
Hauptverfasser: Hu, Jiehui, Gao, Shan, Ma, Weiyi, Yao, Dezhong
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container_title Psychophysiology
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creator Hu, Jiehui
Gao, Shan
Ma, Weiyi
Yao, Dezhong
description Using event‐related potentials, this study measured the access of suprasegmental (tone) and segmental (vowel) information in spoken word recognition with Mandarin idioms. Participants performed a delayed‐response acceptability task, in which they judged the correctness of the last word of each idiom, which might deviate from the correct word in either tone or vowel. Results showed that, compared with the correct idioms, a larger early negativity appeared only for vowel violation. Additionally, a larger N400 effect was observed for vowel mismatch than tone mismatch. A control experiment revealed that these differences were not due to low‐level physical differences across conditions; instead, they represented the greater constraining power of vowels than tones in the lexical selection and semantic integration of the spoken words. Furthermore, tone violation elicited a more robust late positive component than vowel violation, suggesting different reanalyses of the two types of information. In summary, the current results support a functional dissociation of tone and vowel processing in spoken word recognition.
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source MEDLINE; Access via Wiley Online Library
subjects Acoustic Stimulation
Adult
Cerebral Cortex - physiology
Chinese languages
Electroencephalography
ERPs
Event-related potentials
Evoked Potentials, Auditory - physiology
Humans
Integration
Judgment - physiology
Language
Male
Mandarin idioms
Pattern recognition
Physiological psychology
Reaction Time - physiology
Recognition (Psychology) - physiology
Semantics
Speech
Speech Perception - physiology
Spoken word recognition
Tones
Vowels
title Dissociation of tone and vowel processing in Mandarin idioms
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