Abstract

The irrelevant speech effect (ISE) refers to the impairment of visual information processing by background speech. Prior research on the ISE has focused on short-term memory for visually presented word lists. The present research extends this work by using measurements of eye movements to examine effects of irrelevant background speech during Chinese reading. This enabled an examination of the ISE for a language in which access to semantic representations is not strongly mediated by phonology. Participants read sentences while exposed to meaningful irrelevant speech, meaningless speech (scrambled meaningful speech) or silence. A target word of high or low lexical frequency was embedded in each sentence. The results show that meaningful, but not meaningless, background speech produced increased re-reading. In addition, the appearance of a normal word frequency effect, characterised by longer fixation times on low- compared to high-frequency words, was delayed when meaningful or meaningless speech was present in the background. These findings show that irrelevant background speech can disrupt normal processes of reading comprehension and, in addition, that background noise can interfere with the early processing of words. The findings add to evidence showing that normal reading processes can be disrupted by environmental noise such as irrelevant background speech.

Highlights

  • Sound ConditionMeaningful SpeechMeaningless Speech 5830 (306) 5252 (237)Average Fixation Duration 261 (5) 259 (4) Fixation CountNumber of Regressions Forward Saccade Amplitude18.2 (.9) 4.5 (.4) 2.1 (.1)

  • Target word-level analyses were conducted using within-participants analysis of variance (ANOVA) with factors background speech and word frequency, with error variance computed over participants (F1) and stimuli (F2)

  • The present findings provide novel evidence that such effects are observed for a character-based language such as Chinese in which access to meaning may not be strongly mediated by phonological processes

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Summary

Introduction

To gain a clearer indication of the ISE during reading, the present experiment examined effects when sentences contained target words that differed in their frequency of written usage. The present findings will reveal if an ISE is observed for a character-based language in which phonological codes may be less important for access to word meanings. We used a 3 (background speech: meaningful speech, meaningless speech, silence) × 2 (word frequency: high, low) within-participants design.

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