A1 Refereed original research article in a scientific journal

Reading morphologically complex clause structures in Finnish




AuthorsHyona J, Vainio S

PublisherPSYCHOLOGY PRESS

Publication year2001

JournalEuropean Journal of Cognitive Psychology

Journal name in sourceEUROPEAN JOURNAL OF COGNITIVE PSYCHOLOGY

Journal acronymEUR J COGN PSYCHOL

Volume13

Issue4

First page 451

Last page474

Number of pages24

ISSN0954-1446

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1080/09541440042000098


Abstract
The study examined how morphologically complex clause constructions were processed during reading Finnish. Readers' eye fixation patterns were recorded when they read two alternative versions of the same linguistic construction, a morphologically complex converb construction and its less complex subclause counterpart. The complexity of the converb construction is apparent in the construction being marked by less perceivable bound morphemes, which make the clause subject and predicate morphologically more complex and more dense in information. Experiment I showed that more complex converb constructions produced longer gaze durations than the length- and frequency-matched subclause constructions. Experiment 2 showed that the complexity effect is reversed when the more complex clause form was clearly more common in the language than its less complex counterpart. It is concluded that both structural complexity and structural frequency influence the ease with which linguistic expressions are processed during reading.



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