Abstract

Previous studies exploring the cost of reading sentences with words that have two transposed letters in adults showed that initial letter transpositions caused the most disruption to reading, indicating the important role that initial letters play in lexical identification (e.g., Rayner et al., 2006). Regarding children, it is not clear whether differences in reading ability would affect how they encode letter position information as they attempt to identify misspelled words in a reading-like task. The aim of this experiment was to explore how initial-letter position information is encoded by children compared to adults when reading misspelled words, containing transpositions, during a reading-like task. Four different conditions were used: control (words were correctly spelled), TL12 (letters in first and second positions were transposed), TL13 (letters in first and third positions were transposed), and TL23 (letters in second and third positions were transposed). Results showed that TL13 condition caused the most disruption, whereas TL23 caused the least disruption to reading of misspelled words. Although disruption for the TL13 condition was quite rapid in adults, the immediacy of disruption was less so for the TL23 and TL12 conditions. For children, effects of transposition also occurred quite rapidly but were longer lasting. The time course was particularly extended for the less skilled relative to the more skilled child readers. This pattern of effects suggests that both adults and children with higher, relative to lower, reading ability encode internal letter position information more flexibly to identify misspelled words, with transposed letters, during a reading-like task. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2021 APA, all rights reserved).

Highlights

  • The aim of this study was to examine the influence of reading ability upon how adults and children can process misspelled words in sentences as they try to identify them during a reading-like task

  • We conducted an experiment to examine how adults and children process misspelled words in sentences as they attempt to identify them during a reading-like task

  • We examined the time course of both normal and disrupted orthographic encoding in relation to children’s reading ability

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Summary

Introduction

The aim of this study was to examine the influence of reading ability upon how adults and children can process misspelled words in sentences as they try to identify them during a reading-like task. Interest in exploring how eye movement behaviour changes in relation to individual differences in reading ability has increased, and several studies have shown that reading ability influences the nature and the time course of information used for lexical processing during sentence reading (Ashby, Rayner & Clifton, 2005; Ashby, Yang, Evans & Rayner, 2012; Chace, Rayner, and Well, 2005; Häikiö, Bertram, Hyönä & Niemi, 2009; Haenggi & Perfetti, 1994; Jared, Levy & Rayner, 1999; Luke, Henderson, & Ferreira, 2015; Veldre & Andrews, 2014, 2015a, 2015b). During normal text reading, skilled adult readers showed shorter gaze durations and fewer refixations than less skilled adult readers (Luke et al, 2015), suggesting that skilled adult readers are faster to lexically process words than less skilled adult readers

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