Abstract

BackgroundIn alphabetic languages, emerging evidence from behavioral and neuroimaging studies shows the rapid and automatic activation of phonological information in visual word recognition. In the mapping from orthography to phonology, unlike most alphabetic languages in which there is a natural correspondence between the visual and phonological forms, in logographic Chinese, the mapping between visual and phonological forms is rather arbitrary and depends on learning and experience. The issue of whether the phonological information is rapidly and automatically extracted in Chinese characters by the brain has not yet been thoroughly addressed.Methodology/Principal FindingsWe continuously presented Chinese characters differing in orthography and meaning to adult native Mandarin Chinese speakers to construct a constant varying visual stream. In the stream, most stimuli were homophones of Chinese characters: The phonological features embedded in these visual characters were the same, including consonants, vowels and the lexical tone. Occasionally, the rule of phonology was randomly violated by characters whose phonological features differed in the lexical tone.Conclusions/SignificanceWe showed that the violation of the lexical tone phonology evoked an early, robust visual response, as revealed by whole-head electrical recordings of the visual mismatch negativity (vMMN), indicating the rapid extraction of phonological information embedded in Chinese characters. Source analysis revealed that the vMMN was involved in neural activations of the visual cortex, suggesting that the visual sensory memory is sensitive to phonological information embedded in visual words at an early processing stage.

Highlights

  • IntroductionThe role of phonology in visual word recognition has long been an important issue

  • In psycholinguistic research, the role of phonology in visual word recognition has long been an important issue

  • Conclusions/Significance: We showed that the violation of the lexical tone phonology evoked an early, robust visual response, as revealed by whole-head electrical recordings of the visual mismatch negativity, indicating the rapid extraction of phonological information embedded in Chinese characters

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Summary

Introduction

The role of phonology in visual word recognition has long been an important issue. A considerable amount of research evidence supports the idea of an early and automatic activation of phonological encoding in visual word recognition [1,2,3,4]. This literature is mostly based on the research findings in alphabetic scripts. In the mapping and correspondence between orthographic and phonological representations, unlike the alphabetic languages in which there is an intimate correspondence between the visual and phonological forms, there is no letter to sound correspondence in logographic Chinese [8]. The issue of whether the phonological information is rapidly and automatically extracted in Chinese characters by the brain has not yet been thoroughly addressed

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