The role of syllables and morphemes in silent reading: An eye-tracking study.
Elisabetta De SimoneKristina MollLisa FeldmannXenia SchmalzElisabeth BeyersmannPublished in: Quarterly journal of experimental psychology (2006) (2023)
German skilled readers have been found to engage in morphological and syllable-based processing in visual word recognition. However, the relative reliance on syllables and morphemes in reading multi-syllabic complex words is still unresolved. This study aimed to unveil which of these sublexical units are the preferred units of reading by employing eye-tracking technology. Participants silently read sentences while their eye-movements were recorded. Words were visually marked using colour alternation (Experiment 1) or hyphenation (Experiment 2)-at syllable boundary (e.g., Kir-schen ), at morpheme boundary (e.g., Kirsch-en ), or within the units themselves (e.g., Ki-rschen ). A control condition without disruptions was used as a baseline (e.g., Kirschen ). The results of Experiment 1 showed that eye-movements were not modulated by colour alternations. The results of Experiment 2 indicated that hyphens disrupting syllables had a larger inhibitory effect on reading times than hyphens disrupting morphemes, suggesting that eye-movements in German skilled readers are more influenced by syllabic than morphological structure.