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Landi, Nicole – Reading and Writing: An Interdisciplinary Journal, 2010
Using a large adult reading database, we examined the relationships between high-level and low-level reading skills and between multiple reading skills, general cognitive ability, and reading comprehension ability. A principal components analysis found partial dissociability between higher-level skills including reading comprehension, vocabulary…
Descriptors: Reading Comprehension, Spelling, Reading Skills, Cognitive Ability
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Pollatsek, Alexander; Juhasz, Barbara J.; Reichle, Erik D.; Machacek, Debra; Rayner, Keith – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2008
Three experiments examined the effects in sentence reading of varying the frequency and length of an adjective on (a) fixations on the adjective and (b) fixations on the following noun. The gaze duration on the adjective was longer for low frequency than for high frequency adjectives and longer for long adjectives than for short adjectives. This…
Descriptors: Eye Movements, Nouns, Word Frequency, Sentences
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Landi, Nicole; Perfetti, Charles A. – Brain and Language, 2007
The most prominent theories of reading consider reading comprehension ability to be a direct consequence of lower-level reading skills. Recently however, research has shown that some children with poor comprehension ability perform normally on tests of lower-level skills (e.g., decoding). One promising line of behavioral research has found…
Descriptors: Semantics, Reading, Reading Comprehension, Learning Theories
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Perfetti, Charles – Scientific Studies of Reading, 2007
The lexical quality hypothesis (LQH) claims that variation in the quality of word representations has consequences for reading skill, including comprehension. High lexical quality includes well-specified and partly redundant representations of form (orthography and phonology) and flexible representations of meaning, allowing for rapid and reliable…
Descriptors: Phonology, Semantics, Reading Ability, Reading Skills
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Rayner, Keith; Pollatsek, Alexander; Drieghe, Denis; Slattery, Timothy J.; Reichle, Erik D. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, 2007
R. Kliegl, A. Nuthmann, and R. Engbert reported an impressive set of data analyses dealing with the influence of the prior, present, and next word on the duration of the current eye fixation during reading. They argued that outcomes of their regression analyses indicate that lexical processing is distributed across a number of words during…
Descriptors: Reading Research, Human Body, Eye Movements, Language Processing
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Yang, Chin Lung; Perfetti, Charles A.; Schmalhofer, Franz – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2007
An event-related potentials (ERPs) study examined word-to-text integration processes across sentence boundaries. In a two-sentence passage, the accessibility of a referent for the first content word of the second sentence (the target word) was varied by the wording of the first sentence in one of the following ways: lexically (explicitly using…
Descriptors: Inferences, Sentences, Word Recognition, Lexicology
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Beck, Isabel L.; McKeown, Margaret G. – Elementary School Journal, 2007
This article reports on 2 studies with kindergarten and first-grade children from a low-achieving elementary school that provided vocabulary instruction by the students' regular classroom teacher of sophisticated words (advanced vocabulary words) from children's trade books that are typically read aloud. Study 1 compared the number of…
Descriptors: Verbal Tests, Vocabulary, Teaching Methods, Kindergarten
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Landi, Nicole; Perfetti, Charles A.; Bolger, Donald J.; Dunlap, Susan; Foorman, Barbara R. – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2006
To acquire representations of printed words, children must attend to the written form of a word and link this form with the word's pronunciation. When words are read in context, they may be read with less attention to these features, and this can lead to poorer word form retention. Two experiments with young children (ages 5-8 years) confirmed…
Descriptors: Young Children, Pronunciation, Retention (Psychology), Independent Study
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Reichle, Erik D.; Laurent, Patryk A. – Psychological Review, 2006
The eye movements of skilled readers are typically very regular (K. Rayner, 1998). This regularity may arise as a result of the perceptual, cognitive, and motor limitations of the reader (e.g., limited visual acuity) and the inherent constraints of the task (e.g., identifying the words in their correct order). To examine this hypothesis,…
Descriptors: Reinforcement, Eye Movements, Reading, Visual Acuity
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Pollatsek, Alexander; Reichle, Erik D.; Rayner, Keith – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2006
A. W. Inhoff, R. Radach, and B. Eiter (see EJ750907) argue that the current version of the E-Z Reader model (A. Pollatsek, E. D. Reichle, & K. Rayner, see EJ750906) cannot explain 2 key findings in their data, and as a result, the assumption of words being attended to 1 at a time is likely to be false. In this rejoinder, the authors argue that…
Descriptors: Models, Reading Instruction, Hypothesis Testing, Reading Strategies
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Perfetti, Charles A.; Wlotko, Edward W.; Hart, Lesley A. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2005
Adults learned the meanings of rare words (e.g., gloaming) and then made meaning judgments on pairs of words. The 1st word was a trained rare word, an untrained rare word, or an untrained familiar word. Event-related potentials distinguished trained rare words from both untrained rare and familiar words, first at 140 ms and again at 400-600 ms…
Descriptors: Memory, Paired Associate Learning, Vocabulary Development, Semantics
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Pollatsek, Alexander; Reichle, Erik D.; Rayner, Keith – Cognitive Psychology, 2006
This paper is simultaneously a test and refinement of the E-Z Reader model and an exploration of the interrelationship between visual and language processing and eye-movements in reading. Our modeling indicates that the assumption that words in text are processed serially by skilled readers is a viable and attractive hypothesis, as it accounts not…
Descriptors: Models, Eye Movements, Language Processing, Visual Measures
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Reichle, Erik D.; Perfetti, Charles A. – Scientific Studies of Reading, 2003
In reading research, morphological processing and monomorphemic word identification have generally been treated separately. We describe a computational model that brings both kinds of reading together within a single framework. This model assumes that word knowledge-the orthography, phonology, and meaning of words-accumulates with experiences with…
Descriptors: Word Recognition, Morphology (Languages), Morphemes, Simulation