ISSN 0439-755X
CN 11-1911/B
主办:中国心理学会
   中国科学院心理研究所
出版:科学出版社

心理学报 ›› 2000, Vol. 32 ›› Issue (增刊): 47-55.

• 汉语和日语的认知研究 • 上一篇    下一篇

汉字假合成词类词性的评定:阅读汉语合成词时的整体加工和分析加工

Hirofumi Saito, Masahiro Kawakami, Yoshinobu Yanase, Hisashi Masuda   

  • 发布日期:2021-06-21 出版日期:2000-12-30

EVALUATING THE WORDLIKENESS OF KANJI PSEUDO-COMPOUNDS: HOLISTIC AND ANALYTIC PROCESSES IN READING KANJI COMPOUNDS

Hirofumi Saito*, Masahiro Kawakami, Yoshinobu Yanase, Hisashi Masuda   

  1. Nagoya University, Furoh-cho, Chikusa-ku, Nagoya
  • Online:2021-06-21 Published:2000-12-30
  • Contact: *Correspondence concerning this article should be addressed to Hirofumi Saito, Cognitive Informatics Unit, Graduate School of Human Informatics, Nagoya University, Furoh-cho, Chikusa-ku, Nagoya, Japan 464-8601. Electronic mail may be sent to saito@info.human.nagoya-u.ac.jp We are grateful to Susan Schmidt for her thoughtful comments.

Abstract: When transcribing words written in Kana into Kanji, Japanese readers frequently generate pseudo-compounds of two real Kanji characters (Saito & Tsuzuki[1,2]). Kawakami, Saito, and Yanase[3] investigated whether participants' evaluation of Kanji pseudo-compounds as real words is related to their knowledge of individual Kanji characters and real Kanji compounds. Participants were divided into three knowledge groups (high, medium, and low), according to their performance on a cued recall test of Kanji compounds words. The medium knowledge group consistently rated Kanji pseudo-compound words as less wordlike than real Kanji compounds, compared to the high and low knowledge groups. In contrast, the high knowledge group rated real Kanji compounds as more wordlike than the middle or low knowledge groups. The data reported here were separately analyzed with “known or unknown” responses to the pseudo-compound words. The results indicated the same pattern of false positive responses with the “unknown” pseudo-compound words, but not with the “known”. Thus, good readers with extensive knowledge of Kanji compounds were more likely to identify a compound as real, whether it was or not, especially when they recognized the compound as “unknown”. These results suggest that linguistic metaknowledge concerning Kanji compounds and their componential characters can influence wordlikeness judgments for both real and pseudo Kanji compounds.

Key words: Wordlikeness, Common wordlikeness filter, Pseudo-compound words, Subword activation, Japanese Kanji characters