Abstract

In Arabic, a predominantly consonantal script that features a high incidence of lexical ambiguity (heterophonic homographs), glyph-like marks called diacritics supply vowel information that clarifies how each consonant should be pronounced, and thereby disambiguate the pronunciation of consonantal strings. Diacritics are typically omitted from print except in situations where a particular homograph is not sufficiently disambiguated by the surrounding context. In three experiments we investigated whether the presence of disambiguating diacritics on target homographs modulates word frequency, length, and predictability effects during reading. In all experiments, the subordinate representation of the target homographs was instantiated by the diacritics (in the diacritized conditions), and by the context subsequent to the target homographs. The results replicated the effects of word frequency (Experiment 1), word length (Experiment 2), and predictability (Experiment 3). However, there was no evidence that diacritics-based disambiguation modulated these effects in the current study. Rather, diacritized targets in all experiments attracted longer first pass and later (go past and/or total fixation count) processing. These costs are suggested to be a manifestation of the subordinate bias effect. Furthermore, in all experiments, the diacritics-based disambiguation facilitated later sentence processing, relative to when the diacritics were absent. The reported findings expand existing knowledge about processing of diacritics, their contribution towards lexical ambiguity resolution, and sentence processing.

Highlights

  • Arabic is a interesting language for investigating how resolution of lexical ambiguity occurs, and how it influences reading behavior

  • These are (i) word skipping probability; first pass reading measures, namely (ii) first fixation duration; (iii) single fixation duration; and (iv) gaze duration

  • This measure includes regressions originating from the target word); (vi) total fixation count; and (vii) total fixation time

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Summary

Introduction

Arabic is a interesting language for investigating how resolution of lexical ambiguity occurs, and how it influences reading behavior. This is because Arabic features a predominantly consonantal script, where each consonantal string can have multiple pronunciations, and meanings associated with these pronunciations (heterophonic homographs). We report three experiments that investigated diacriticsbased lexical ambiguity resolution in different types of Arabic words, namely, words of highand low-frequency (Experiment 1), short and long words (Experiment 2), and low-predictability words (Experiment 3, given that high-predictability words would not require such disambiguation)

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