TY - BOOK ID - 143495290 TI - Analyzing the Korean Alphabet : The Science of Hangul PY - 2024 SN - 9783031496332 PB - Cham : Springer International Publishing : Imprint: Springer, DB - UniCat KW - Korean language KW - Historical linguistics. KW - Alphabet. KW - Applied linguistics. KW - Asia KW - Language and languages KW - Language and languages. KW - Grammar, Comparative and general KW - Literacy. KW - Applied Linguistics. KW - Asian Languages. KW - Orthography. KW - Language History. KW - Phonology and Phonetics. KW - Languages. KW - Orthography and spelling. KW - Phonology. UR - https://www.unicat.be/uniCat?func=search&query=sysid:143495290 AB - This book provides comprehensive coverage of the Korean alphabet, Hangul, and includes a synthesis of research findings relating to reading in the non-Roman alphabet. This, in turn, contributes to the science of reading through an understanding of reading mechanisms that are essential for all writing systems, and that are particular for a given writing system. Hangul has been recognized as “the world’s best alphabet,” “one of the great intellectual achievements of Mankind,” and “alphabet’s epitome, a star among alphabets” by some linguists and historians. It is known that writing systems have evolved based on the ecological principle that visual signs are culturally selected to match objects found in natural scenes through selection pressures for optimal visual processing. However, Hangul is an exception. It was purposely invented by King Sejong in the 15th century to combat the illiteracy prevalent at the time. The chapters excavate the historical background of Hangul, and the unique characteristics of Hangul that contribute to learnability for emergent readers and efficiency for skilled readers. The author presents empirical evidence of psycholinguistic research into reading Hangul, building theories and presenting implications for the science of reading (psycholinguistics) and the science of writing (grapholinguistics). This book is relevant to students, researchers, and practitioners in applied linguistics, psycholinguistics, language studies, reading studies, and grammatology, with a particular focus on the Korean alphabet. ER -