Influences of Splittability and Character Type on Processing of Chinese Two-Character Verb–Object Constructions
Xiaoxin Chen, Degao Li, Wenling Ma, Meixue Zhang, Jin Wang

TL;DR
This study explores how Chinese readers process two-character verb-object words, considering how splitability and character type affect their reading performance.
Contribution
The study introduces new insights into how syntactic phrasalization and character type influence the processing of Chinese two-character verb-object constructions.
Findings
There is a significant interaction between splittability and character type in participants' performance.
The effect of primer type is significant in Experiment 1, while Experiment 2 reveals additional interactions involving primer type.
Skilled readers process verb-object constructions with syntactic and semantic combinations of constituent characters.
Abstract
It is theoretically accepted that Chinese two-character words (2C-words) are processed both holistically and according to their constituent characters. Given the evidence on readers’ sensitivities to the syntactic relationships between the constituent characters, however, this general view might not fully explain the 2C-word processing mechanism. As an important category of 2C-words, verb–object constructions (VOCs) exhibit significant heterogeneity in splittability, the degree of syntactic phrasalization through the insertion of other characters between the constituent characters. To examine skilled readers’ VOC processing under the influences of splittability and whether the constituent characters are bound or free characters (character type), two experiments were conducted on a cohort of college students, who were Chinese native speakers, using the lexical decision task in a…
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Taxonomy
TopicsReading and Literacy Development · Neurobiology of Language and Bilingualism · Language, Metaphor, and Cognition
