Syllables and inflectional morphemes in early Finnish readers: evidence from eye-movements




Tuomo Häikiö, Seppo Vainio

PublisherCambridge University Press

Cambridge

2018

Journal of Child Language

Journal of Child Language

45

5

1227

1245

19

0305-0009

1469-7602

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1017/S0305000918000132

https://research.utu.fi/converis/portal/detail/Publication/32016804



Finnish is a language with simple syllable structure but rich
morphology. It was investigated whether syllables or morphemes are
preferred processing units in early reading. To this end, Finnish first-
and second-grade children read sentences with embedded inflected target
words while their eye-movements were registered. The target words were
either in essive or inessive/adessive (i.e., locative) case. The target
words were either non-hyphenated, or had syllable-congruent or
syllable-incongruent hyphenation. For the locatives, the
syllable-incongruent hyphenation coincided with the morpheme boundary,
but this was not the case for the essives. It was shown that the
second-graders were slowed down by hyphenation to a larger extent than
first-graders. However, there was no slowdown in gaze duration for
either age group when the syllable-incongruent hyphen was
morpheme-congruent. These findings suggest that Finnish readers already
utilize morpheme-level information during the first grade.


Last updated on 2024-26-11 at 13:40