Representation of letter position in single-word reading: Evidence from acquired dyslexia

被引:14
|
作者
McCloskey, Michael [1 ]
Fischer-Baum, Simon [2 ]
Schubert, Teresa [1 ]
机构
[1] Johns Hopkins Univ, Dept Cognit Sci, Baltimore, MD 21218 USA
[2] Rice Univ, Dept Psychol, Houston, TX 77251 USA
基金
美国国家科学基金会;
关键词
Alexia; Dyslexia; Reading; Serial order; Letter position; Word recognition; ORTHOGRAPHIC STRUCTURE; PRINTED WORD; DUAL-ROUTE; MODEL; PERCEPTION; ORDER; RECOGNITION; INFORMATION; SYLLABLES; ACCESS;
D O I
10.1080/02643294.2014.880675
中图分类号
B84 [心理学];
学科分类号
04 ; 0402 ;
摘要
Visual word recognition requires information about the positions as well as the identities of the letters in a word. This study addresses representation of letter position at prelexical levels of the word recognition process. We present evidence from an acquired dyslexic patient, L.H.D., who perseverates letters in single-word reading tasks: Far more often than expected by chance, L.H.D.'s reading responses include letters from preceding responses (e.g., SAILOR read as SAILOG immediately after FLAG was read correctly). Analyses carried out over two large data sets compared the positions of perseverated letters (e.g., the G in SAILOG) with the positions of the corresponding source letters (e.g., the G in FLAG). The analyses assessed the extent to which the perseverations preserved source position as defined by various theories of letter position representation. The results provided strong evidence for graded both-edges position representations, in which the position of each letter is encoded coarsely relative to both the beginning and the end of the word. Alternative position representation schemes, including letter-context and orthosyllabic schemes, were not supported.
引用
收藏
页码:396 / 428
页数:33
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Word-based Position Representation in Letter Identification: Evidence from Acquired Dyslexia
    Schubert, T.
    McCloskey, M.
    [J]. 50TH ACADEMY OF APHASIA MEETING, 2012, 61 : 307 - 308
  • [2] Representation of letter position in spelling: Evidence from acquired dysgraphia
    Fischer-Baum, Simon
    McCloskey, Michael
    Rapp, Brenda
    [J]. COGNITION, 2010, 115 (03) : 466 - 490
  • [3] THE ASSIGNMENT OF WORD STRESS IN ORAL READING - EVIDENCE FROM A CASE OF ACQUIRED DYSLEXIA
    MICELI, G
    CARAMAZZA, A
    [J]. COGNITIVE NEUROPSYCHOLOGY, 1993, 10 (03) : 273 - 296
  • [4] Age of Acquisition Effect: Evidence From Single-Word Reading and Neural Networks
    Sohrabi, Ahmad
    [J]. BASIC AND CLINICAL NEUROSCIENCE, 2019, 10 (02) : 137 - 146
  • [5] WORD STRESS IN GERMAN SINGLE-WORD READING
    Beyermann, Sandra
    Penke, Martina
    [J]. READING PSYCHOLOGY, 2014, 35 (06) : 577 - 600
  • [6] SINGLE-WORD READING IN COLLEGE DYSLEXICS
    WATSON, FL
    BROWN, GDA
    [J]. APPLIED COGNITIVE PSYCHOLOGY, 1992, 6 (03) : 263 - 272
  • [7] Morphological Processing in Single-Word and Sentence Reading
    Mousikou, Petroula
    Schroeder, Sascha
    [J]. JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY-LEARNING MEMORY AND COGNITION, 2019, 45 (05) : 881 - 903
  • [8] Insights from letter position dyslexia on morphological decomposition in reading
    Friedmann, Naama
    Gvion, Aviah
    Nisim, Roni
    [J]. FRONTIERS IN HUMAN NEUROSCIENCE, 2015, 9
  • [9] The time-course of single-word reading: Evidence from fast behavioral and brain responses
    Hauk, O.
    Coutout, C.
    Holden, A.
    Chen, Y.
    [J]. NEUROIMAGE, 2012, 60 (02) : 1462 - 1477
  • [10] The Effects of Rate on Single-Word Reading Assessment
    Carter, Matthew D.
    Walker, Marianna M.
    O'Brien, Kevin
    [J]. AMERICAN JOURNAL OF SPEECH-LANGUAGE PATHOLOGY, 2015, 24 (01) : 13 - 23