Harris Lindsay N, Perfetti Charles A
Department of Leadership, Educational Psychology, and Foundations, Northern Illinois UniversityDeKalb, IL, USA; Center for the Interdisciplinary Study of Language and Literacy, Northern Illinois UniversityDeKalb, IL, USA.
Department of Psychology, University of PittsburghPittsburgh, PA, USA; Learning Research and Development Center, University of PittsburghPittsburgh, PA, USA.
Front Psychol. 2016 Feb 9;7:96. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2016.00096. eCollection 2016.
There is extensive evidence that the segmental (i.e., phonemic) layer of phonology is routinely activated during reading, but little is known about whether phonological activation extends beyond phonemes to subsegmental layers (which include articulatory information, such as voicing) and suprasegmental layers (which include prosodic information, such as lexical stress). In three proofreading experiments, we show that spelling errors are detected more reliably in syllables that are stressed than in syllables that are unstressed if comprehension is a goal of the reader, indicating that suprasegmental phonology is both active during silent reading and can influence orthographic processes. In Experiment 1, participants received instructions to read for both errors and comprehension, and we found that the effect of lexical stress interacted with linguistic predictability, such that detection of errors in more predictable words was aided by stress but detection of errors in less predictable words was not. This finding suggests that lexical stress patterns can be accessed prelexically if an upcoming word is sufficiently predictable from context. Participants with stronger vocabularies showed decreased effects of stress on task performance, which is consistent with previous findings that more skilled readers are less swayed by phonological information in decisions about orthographic form. In two subsequent experiments, participants were instructed to read only for errors (Experiment 2) or only for comprehension (Experiment 3); the effect of stress disappeared when participants read for errors and reappeared when participants read for comprehension, reconfirming our hypothesis that predictability is a driver of lexical stress effects. In all experiments, errors were detected more reliably in words that were difficult to predict from context than in words that were highly predictable. Taken together, this series of experiments contributes two important findings to the field of reading and cognition: (1) The prosodic property of lexical stress can influence orthographic processing, and (2) Predictability inhibits the detection of errors in written language processing.
有大量证据表明,在阅读过程中,音系学的音段(即音素)层面会被常规激活,但对于音系激活是否会从音素扩展到次音段层面(包括发音信息,如浊音)和超音段层面(包括韵律信息,如词汇重音),我们却知之甚少。在三项校对实验中,我们发现,如果理解是读者的目标,那么在重读音节中比在非重读音节中能更可靠地检测到拼写错误,这表明超音段音系学在默读过程中是活跃的,并且能够影响正字法过程。在实验1中,参与者收到既要找出错误又要理解内容的指令,我们发现词汇重音的影响与语言可预测性相互作用,即对于更可预测的单词,重音有助于错误检测,而对于较不可预测的单词则不然。这一发现表明,如果即将出现的单词从语境中足够可预测,那么词汇重音模式可以在词汇前被获取。词汇量较强的参与者,重音对任务表现的影响较小,这与之前的研究结果一致,即更熟练的读者在关于正字法形式的决策中受音系信息的影响较小。在随后的两项实验中,参与者被要求仅找出错误(实验2)或仅进行理解(实验3);当参与者找出错误时,重音的影响消失,而当参与者进行理解时,重音的影响再次出现,这再次证实了我们的假设,即可预测性是词汇重音效应的驱动因素。在所有实验中,与高度可预测的单词相比,在难以从语境中预测的单词中能更可靠地检测到错误。综上所述,这一系列实验为阅读和认知领域贡献了两个重要发现:(1)词汇重音的韵律特性可以影响正字法加工;(2)可预测性会抑制书面语言加工中错误的检测。