2017
DOI: 10.1037/xhp0000374
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The phonological unit of Japanese Kanji compounds: A masked priming investigation.

Abstract: Using the masked priming paradigm, we examined which phonological unit is used when naming Kanji compounds. Although the phonological unit in the Japanese language has been suggested to be the mora, Experiment 1 found no priming for mora-related Kanji prime-target pairs. In Experiment 2, significant priming was only found when Kanji pairs shared the of their initial Kanji characters. Nevertheless, when the same Kanji pairs used in Experiment 2 were transcribed into Kana, significant mora priming was observed i… Show more

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Cited by 7 publications
(50 citation statements)
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References 64 publications
(218 reference statements)
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“…The results for the kana distractors replicated Experiment 1 and previous findings of mora overlap effects found with the implicit priming procedure (Kureta et al, 2006) and the masked onset priming read-aloud experiments (Verdonschot et al, 2011). In contrast, the results for the kanji distractors stand in contrast to the results reported by Yoshihara et al (2017), particularly with respect to the fact that their multimoraic kanji stimuli did not show any mora priming in the masked priming read-aloud task. Before turning to a discussion of this dissociation, we note that here numerically the initial mora congruence effect was smaller for the kanji stimuli (34 ms) than the kana stimuli (48 ms), and the interaction with script type was statistically significant when the item and subject variability in the sensitivity to the congruence was disregarded.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 81%
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“…The results for the kana distractors replicated Experiment 1 and previous findings of mora overlap effects found with the implicit priming procedure (Kureta et al, 2006) and the masked onset priming read-aloud experiments (Verdonschot et al, 2011). In contrast, the results for the kanji distractors stand in contrast to the results reported by Yoshihara et al (2017), particularly with respect to the fact that their multimoraic kanji stimuli did not show any mora priming in the masked priming read-aloud task. Before turning to a discussion of this dissociation, we note that here numerically the initial mora congruence effect was smaller for the kanji stimuli (34 ms) than the kana stimuli (48 ms), and the interaction with script type was statistically significant when the item and subject variability in the sensitivity to the congruence was disregarded.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 81%
“…The critical prediction concerned the kanji distractors. Recall that Yoshihara et al (2017) found no initial mora priming effect for two-character kanji words unless the whole pronunciation of the initial kanji character was the same in the prime and the target; kana transcription of the prime and target words restored the initial mora priming effect. If these results are due to the script-dependence of phonological unit of speech production, then similarly no initial mora congruence effect should be found in the present Stroop color naming task for the kanji distractors.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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