Title of article :
MORPHOLOGICAL PARAFOVEAL PREVIEW BENEFIT EFFECTS WHEN READING DERIVED WORDS IN MALAY
Author/Authors :
Winskel, Heather Southern Cross University - School of Health and Human Sciences, Australia , Salehuddin, Khazriyati Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia - Faculty of Social Sciences and Humanities, School of Language Studies and Linguistics, Malaysia
From page :
23
To page :
40
Abstract :
Eye-movement tracking is a method that is used to study reading across different languages and is increasingly being employed. Eye movements provide a window into the underlying cognitive processes and mechanisms while a person is reading (Rayner, 1998). The majority of research investigating eye movements during reading has been conducted on European languages such as English and German; relatively little work has been conducted on other writing systems such as Malay. Malay offers an interesting opportunity to investigate early morphological processing because Malay has a rich derivational morphology that is more structurally and semantically transparent than English. The current study investigates whether the morphological constituents of affixed words (prefixed and suffixed) in Malay influence early word processing during reading using the boundary paradigm (Rayner, 1975). The boundary paradigm involves the positioning of a preview word stimulus in place of the target word so that when the eyes move towards the preview word, they cross an invisible boundary that triggers a change from the preview word to the target word. Two commonly used affixes were used: a prefix pe- and a suffix -an, which both convert a verb into a nominal (e.g. lakon, to act, with the prefix pe- becomes pelakon, actor; and makan, to eat, with the suffix -an becomes makanan, food).
Keywords :
eye movements , Malay , reading , morphological processing
Journal title :
Journal Of Malaysian Studies
Journal title :
Journal Of Malaysian Studies
Record number :
2699576
Link To Document :
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