The perceptual structure of printed words: The case of silent E words in French

被引:4
|
作者
Chetail, Fabienne [1 ]
Content, Alain [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Libre Bruxelles, CRCN, LCLD, Av F Roosevelt 50,CP 191, B-1050 Brussels, Belgium
关键词
CV pattern; silent E; Spoken and written modality; Unit counting; Word length estimation; BIGRAM TROUGH HYPOTHESIS; SYLLABLE FREQUENCY; WRITTEN WORDS; ORTHOGRAPHIC STRUCTURE; RECOGNITION; UNITS; MODEL; SEGMENTATION; ORGANIZATION; PHONOLOGY;
D O I
10.1016/j.jml.2017.07.007
中图分类号
H0 [语言学];
学科分类号
030303 ; 0501 ; 050102 ;
摘要
According to a widespread view on functional units in word reading, the perceptual structure of printed words is constrained by print-to-speech mappings. Here, we examined the hypothesis that the organization of consonant and vowel letters (the CV pattern) determines the perceived structure of letter strings. Skilled readers were presented with two kinds of bisyllabic French words. Half of the words included a silent E between two consonants (e.g., gobelet, /goble/) thus entailing three orthographic vowel groups, while the other half were control words with two vowel groups (e.g., cremeux, /kRemo/). Participants had to decide on the number of units or reproduce the physical length of the stimuli. Silent E words were consistently estimated to be longer (more units, longer lines) than control words, despite being matched in number of letters and phonemes. The effect was present both in the written modality (Experiments 1A-1B) and in the spoken modality (Experiments 2A-2B). When prereaders and beginning readers with limited knowledge of the orthographic form of words performed the tasks (Experiments 3A-3B), no bias was found, confirming its orthographic nature in skilled readers. The study provides a clear confirmation of the predictions based on the CV pattern hypothesis according to which the number of vowel letter clusters determines the perceived units of letter strings. (C) 2017 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:121 / 134
页数:14
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Reading habits, perceptual learning, and recognition of printed words
    Nazir, TA
    Ben-Boutayab, N
    Decoppet, N
    Deutsch, A
    Frost, R
    [J]. BRAIN AND LANGUAGE, 2004, 88 (03) : 294 - 311
  • [2] LATIN WORDS IN FRENCH - FRENCH - WOLFF,E
    BELLATI, G
    [J]. STUDI FRANCESI, 1994, 38 (02) : 403 - 403
  • [3] LATIN WORDS IN FRENCH - FRENCH - WOLFF,E
    DRUET, FX
    [J]. ETUDES CLASSIQUES, 1996, 64 (02) : 176 - 176
  • [4] Perceptual processing of partially and fully assimilated words in French
    Snoeren, Natalie D.
    Segui, Juan
    Halle, Pierre A.
    [J]. JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY-HUMAN PERCEPTION AND PERFORMANCE, 2008, 34 (01) : 193 - 204
  • [5] Perceptual and Interoceptive Strength Norms for 270 French Words
    Miceli, Aurelie
    Wauthia, Erika
    Lefebvre, Laurent
    Ris, Laurence
    Simoes Loureiro, Isabelle
    [J]. FRONTIERS IN PSYCHOLOGY, 2021, 12
  • [6] THE CONSCIENCE OF WORDS - FRENCH - CANETTI,E
    CRIPS, L
    [J]. ESPRIT, 1984, (12) : 179 - 180
  • [7] FOREIGNERS WORDS - FRENCH - WIESEL,E
    SCHULMANN, F
    [J]. ESPRIT, 1983, (03) : 166 - 166
  • [8] PICTURES AND WORDS - FRENCH - POPPER,E
    WALTER, M
    [J]. MODERN LANGUAGE JOURNAL, 1969, 53 (03): : 214 - 214
  • [9] CONSCIOUSNESS OF WORDS - FRENCH - CANETTI,E
    DAVIAU, DM
    [J]. LIBERTE, 1985, 27 (01): : 177 - 180
  • [10] THE CONSCIENCE OF WORDS - FRENCH - CANETTI,E
    BLOT, J
    [J]. NOUVELLE REVUE FRANCAISE, 1984, (383): : 107 - 109