Phonological Coding during Sentence Reading in Chinese Deaf Readers: An Eye-Tracking Study

被引:6
|
作者
Yan, Guoli [1 ]
Lan, Zebo [1 ]
Meng, Zhu [1 ]
Wang, Yingchao [1 ]
Benson, Valerie [2 ]
机构
[1] Tianjin Normal Univ, Acad Psychol & Behav, Tianjin, Peoples R China
[2] Univ Cent Lancashire, Sch Psychol, Preston PR1 2HE, Lancs, England
关键词
VISUAL WORD RECOGNITION; TIME-COURSE; ACTIVATION; HEARING; SKILLS; COMPREHENSION; SENSITIVITY; AWARENESS; MEANINGS; CHILDREN;
D O I
10.1080/10888438.2020.1778000
中图分类号
G40 [教育学];
学科分类号
040101 ; 120403 ;
摘要
Phonological coding plays an important role in reading for hearing students. Experimental findings regarding phonological coding in deaf readers are controversial, and whether deaf readers are able to use phonological coding remains unclear. In the current study we examined whether Chinese deaf students could use phonological coding during sentence reading. Deaf middle school students, chronological age-matched hearing students, and reading ability-matched hearing students had their eye movements recorded as they read sentences containing correctly spelled characters, homophones, or unrelated characters. Both hearing groups had shorter total reading times on homophones than they did on unrelated characters. In contrast, no significant difference was found between homophones and unrelated characters for the deaf students. However, when the deaf group was divided into more-skilled and less-skilled readers according to their scores on reading fluency, the homophone advantage noted for the hearing controls was also observed for the more-skilled deaf students.
引用
下载
收藏
页码:287 / 303
页数:17
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Phonological, not semantic, activation dominates Chinese character recognition: Evidence from a visual world eye-tracking study
    Tong, Xiuhong
    Shen, Wei
    Li, Zhao
    Xu, Mengdi
    Pan, Liping
    Tong, Shelley Xiuli
    QUARTERLY JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY, 2020, 73 (04): : 617 - 628
  • [42] Reading Goals and Executive Function in Autism: An Eye-Tracking Study
    Micai, Martina
    Vulchanova, Mila
    Saldana, David
    AUTISM RESEARCH, 2021, 14 (05) : 1007 - 1024
  • [43] The role of syllables and morphemes in silent reading: An eye-tracking study
    De Simone, Elisabetta
    Moll, Kristina
    Feldmann, Lisa
    Schmalz, Xenia
    Beyersmann, Elisabeth
    QUARTERLY JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY, 2023, 76 (11): : 2493 - 2513
  • [44] The role of prosodic information in silent reading: An eye-tracking study
    Cergol, Kristina
    Palmovic, Marijan
    SUVREMENA LINGVISTIKA, 2024, 50 (97):
  • [45] Reading Difficulties in Adult Deaf Readers of French: Phonological Codes, Not Guilty!
    Belanger, Nathalie N.
    Baum, Shari R.
    Mayberry, Rachel I.
    SCIENTIFIC STUDIES OF READING, 2012, 16 (03) : 263 - 285
  • [46] Word and pseudoword reading in young adults: an eye-tracking study
    Marchezini, Fernanda
    Claessens, Peter Maurice Erna
    Carthery-Goulart, Maria Teresa
    CODAS, 2022, 34 (04):
  • [47] Orthographic and phonological selectivity across the reading system in deaf skilled readers
    Glezer, Laurie S.
    Weisberg, Jill
    Farnady, Cindy O'Grady
    McCullough, Stephen
    Midgley, Katherine J.
    Holcomb, Phillip J.
    Emmorey, Karen
    NEUROPSYCHOLOGIA, 2018, 117 : 500 - 512
  • [48] Universality in reading processes: Evidence from an eye-tracking study
    Matsunaga, S
    PSYCHOLOGIA, 1999, 42 (04) : 290 - 306
  • [49] Rhythmic subvocalization: An eye-tracking study on silent poetry reading
    Beck, Judith
    Konieczny, Lars
    JOURNAL OF EYE MOVEMENT RESEARCH, 2020, 13 (03): : 1 - 40
  • [50] Fake News Reading on Social Media: An Eye-tracking Study
    Simko, Jakub
    Hanakova, Martina
    Racsko, Patrik
    Tomlein, Matus
    Moro, Robert
    Bielikova, Maria
    PROCEEDINGS OF THE 30TH ACM CONFERENCE ON HYPERTEXT AND SOCIAL MEDIA (HT '19), 2019, : 221 - 230