Abstract

Two lexical priming experiments were conducted to examine effects of grammatical structure of Chinese two-constituent compounds on their recognition. The target compound words conformed to two types of grammatical structure: subordinate and coordinative compounds. Subordinate compounds follow a structure where the first constituent modifies the second constituent (e.g., , meaning snowball); here the meaning of the second constituent (head) is modified by the first constituent (modifier). On the other hand, in coordinative compounds both constituents contribute equally to the word meaning (e.g., , wind and rain, meaning storm where the two constituent equally contribute to the word meaning). In Experiment 1 that was a replication attempt of Liu and McBride-Chang (2010), possible priming effects of word structure and semantic relatedness were examined. In lexical decision latencies only a semantic priming effect was observed. In Experiment 2, compound word structure and individual constituents were primed by the prime and target sharing either the first or second constituent. A structure priming effect was obtained in lexical decision times for subordinate compounds when the prime and target compound shared the same constituent. This suggests that a compound word constituent (either the modifier or the head) has to be simultaneously active with the structure information in order for the structure information to exert an effect on compound word recognition in Chinese. For the coordinative compounds the structure priming effect was non-significant. When the meaning of the whole word was primed (Experiment 1), no structure effect was observable. The pattern of results suggests that effects of structure priming are constituent-specific and no general structure priming was observable.

Highlights

  • In order to understand word recognition in Chinese, a key issue to be resolved is how compound words are identified

  • In Experiment 2A, we examined whether an effect of the grammatical structure of Chinese compound words can be established for coordinative compounds when the prime and the target compounds shared the same first or second constituent

  • The results are consistent with previous studies (Zwitserlood, 1994; Libben et al, 2003; Ji and Gagné, 2007). This suggests that access to compound word constituents is an integral part of compound word recognition in Chinese

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Summary

Introduction

In order to understand word recognition in Chinese, a key issue to be resolved is how compound words are identified. The vast majority (approximately 93%) are two-constituent compound words (Zhu, 2005)—the kind studied in the present study. In many Western languages (e.g., English, German, Finnish), the grammatical structure of two-constituent compound words typically conforms to a modifier-head structure: in snowball the meaning of the head noun (ball) is modified by the constituent preceding the head (snow).The way the head is modified by the modifier constitutes the thematic relation between the two constituents. In the case of snowball, a MADE OF relation exists between the constituents, that is ball is made of snow. A FOR relation exists for snowtire (i.e., tire used for snow)

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