Abstract

This study aimed to identify the cognitive underpinnings of Japanese kanji abilities and clarify the contributions of kanji acquisition to the development of higher-level language skills based on a three-dimensional view of kanji abilities encompassing reading accuracy, writing accuracy, and semantic comprehension. First, a series of regression analyses was used to identify the multifactorial models of each dimension of Japanese kanji acquisition. These models suggest that, among basic cognitive skills, naming speed, visuospatial processing, and syntactic processing underpin kanji abilities in a dimension-specific manner, whereas phonological processing is a common factor. Second, although all the dimensions of kanji abilities predicted acquired verbal knowledge equally, writing skills on the text level, measured as idea density, were only predicted by the writing dimension (indirectly via acquired knowledge). Our findings represent the first evidence of the dimension-specific relationships of the three dimensions of Japanese kanji abilities with their cognitive predictors, as well as with higher-level language skills. They suggest the importance of handwriting acquisition during school years for the development of language skills through to adulthood. Finally, taking the seminal “Nun study,” which suggests that higher idea density is protective against dementia, into account, we propose a theoretical framework for the lifelong trajectory of literacy acquisition.

Highlights

  • This study aimed to identify the cognitive underpinnings of Japanese kanji abilities and clarify the contributions of kanji acquisition to the development of higher-level language skills based on a threedimensional view of kanji abilities encompassing reading accuracy, writing accuracy, and semantic comprehension

  • The seminal “Nun study” retrospectively analyzed autobiographies that had been written by nuns in their young adulthood and showed that higher idea density predicted intact cognition in later life, regardless of the presence or absence of Alzheimer’s disease ­lesions[36,37]. This relationship between higher idea density in young adulthood and intact cognition in later life was replicated in a study that analyzed medical school admission essays[38]. These findings suggest that attainment of higher language proficiency before and during young adulthood may protect against cognitive decline and dementia in late life, and in addition, seem to validate the notion that idea density can be a measure of highly sophisticated skills

  • The current study revealed the relationships of Japanese literacy with its cognitive underpinnings as well as with higher-level language skills based on the three-dimensional view of kanji abilities, i.e., reading accuracy, writing accuracy, and semantic comprehension

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Summary

Introduction

This study aimed to identify the cognitive underpinnings of Japanese kanji abilities and clarify the contributions of kanji acquisition to the development of higher-level language skills based on a threedimensional view of kanji abilities encompassing reading accuracy, writing accuracy, and semantic comprehension. A series of regression analyses was used to identify the multifactorial models of each dimension of Japanese kanji acquisition These models suggest that, among basic cognitive skills, naming speed, visuospatial processing, and syntactic processing underpin kanji abilities in a dimension-specific manner, whereas phonological processing is a common factor. Our findings represent the first evidence of the dimension-specific relationships of the three dimensions of Japanese kanji abilities with their cognitive predictors, as well as with higherlevel language skills They suggest the importance of handwriting acquisition during school years for the development of language skills through to adulthood. From the perspective of the development of language skills, this study investigated the relationship of kanji abilities with their cognitive underpinnings as well as with higher-level language skills in Japanese university students who had completed 12 school years of kanji education. These cognitive domains have been shown to contribute differently to reading and ­writing[13,23]

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