ISSN 0439-755X
CN 11-1911/B

Acta Psychologica Sinica ›› 2020, Vol. 52 ›› Issue (10): 1143-1155.doi: 10.3724/SP.J.1041.2020.01143

• Reports of Empirical Studies •     Next Articles

The word frequency effect of fovea and its effect on the preview effect of parafovea in Tibetan reading

GAO Xiaolei1, LI Xiaowei1, SUN Min1, BAI Xuejun2(), GAO Lei1,3()   

  1. 1 Plateau Brain Science Research Center, Tibet University, Lhasa 850000, China
    2 Faculty of Psychology, Tianjin Normal University, Tianjin 300387, China
    3 Department of management and economics, Tianjin University, Tianjin 300072, China
  • Received:2020-01-08 Published:2020-10-25 Online:2020-08-24
  • Contact: BAI Xuejun,GAO Lei E-mail:bxuejun@126.com;gaolei1983good@sina.cn
  • Supported by:
    National Natural Science Foundation of China(31860280);Natural Science Foundation of Tibet Autonomous Region(XZ2019ZRG-22);Cultivation fund of Tibet University(ZDCZJH19-21);Central support fund for reform and development of local colleges and universities of Tibet University in 2020(00060607)

Abstract:

In the process of reading, readers mainly obtain information through the foveal region—in particular, the parafovea plays an important role in information acquisition. Readers can obtain certain information from the parafovea through preview processing, thus promoting the improvement of reading efficiency, which is called the “preview effect”. The effect of the processing load of the fovea on the preview effect of parafovea has become a popular research focus in recent years. For example, studies based on alphabetic writing have found that the preview effect of the parafovea is greater for high-frequency and short words than for low-frequency and long words. While Tibetan is an analphabetic language, it also belongs to the Sino-Tibetan language family and has many similarities with Chinese. However, it is still largely unclear how to reflect the above role in the process of Tibetan reading. Will it only show the common characteristics of alphabetic languages or will it show some Chinese characteristics? The present study aimed to provide experimental evidence for these research questions.

Two experiments were carried out on 119 Tibetan undergraduate students. More specifically, participants were asked to read Tibetan sentences and their eye movements during reading were recorded using a SR Research EyeLink 1000Plus eye tracker (sampling rate = 1000 Hz). Experiment 1 manipulated the foveal word frequency (i.e., high vs. low frequency) to investigate the word frequency effect and word frequency delay effect of foveal words in Tibetan reading. The results showed a word frequency effect and a word frequency delay effect in Tibetan reading. Experiment 2 manipulated both foveal word frequency and parafoveal preview word types with the aid of boundary paradigm to investigate the preview effect of parafovea and the effect of foveal word frequency on the preview effect of parafovea in Tibetan reading. The results showed a preview effect of parafovea in Tibetan reading and that, when compared with low-frequency foveal words, high-frequency foveal words had a greater promoting effect on the preview effect of parafovea.

The primary findings can be summarized as follows: (1) significant word frequency effect exists in Tibetan reading, which is reflected in the whole process of vocabulary processing; (2) there is a significant word frequency delay effect in Tibetan reading, which runs through the whole process of vocabulary processing; (3) there is a significant preview effect of parafovea in Tibetan reading, through which the reader can extract phonology and font information; and (4) in Tibetan reading, foveal word frequency affects the size of the preview effect of parafovea—moreover, word frequency only affects the extraction of font preview information in the early stage of lexical processing; that is, the preview effect of high-frequency words is greater under the condition of font preview.

In conclusion, the effect of the processing load of fovea on the preview effect of parafovea shows the common characteristics of alphabetic writing in Tibetan reading. In addition, this study found that reading Tibetan involves the word frequency delay effect and the preview effect of parafovea. These findings support theory of parafovea sequence processing in the E-Z reader model.

Key words: Tibetan reading, word frequency effect, word frequency delay effect, preview effect, eye movement