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Ruomeng Zhu; Mateo Obregón; Hamutal Kreiner; Richard Shillcock – Scientific Studies of Reading, 2024
Purpose: We compare right-to-left and left-to-right orthographies to test the theory, derived from studying the latter, that small temporal asynchronies between the two eyes at the beginning and end of every fixation favor ocular prevalence for the left eye in the left hemifield and the right eye in the right hemifield. Ocular prevalence is the…
Descriptors: Reading Processes, Eye Movements, Orthographic Symbols, Arabic
Lillian Chang – ProQuest LLC, 2024
Language is a unique skill used by humans to communicate thoughts and feelings. For most individuals, language is understood through different sensory modalities--for instance, hearing auditory words relies on audition, while perceiving visual speech via lipreading and reading written text both utilize the visual system. Although these different…
Descriptors: Reading, Oral Language, Language Processing, Brain Hemisphere Functions
Kurt Winsler – ProQuest LLC, 2024
The visual system is tuned by its inputs. The behavior of reading offers a unique way to examine tuning for visual representations (letters) because readers have massive experience recognizing letters in a systematic context (reading). One aspect of reading is that letters are highly crowded within words, which severely limits their…
Descriptors: Alphabets, Reading Processes, Word Recognition, Comparative Analysis
Fang Wang; Blair Kaneshiro; Elizabeth Y. Toomarian; Radhika S. Gosavi; Lindsey R. Hasak; Suanna Moron; Quynh Trang H. Nguyen; Anthony M. Norcia; Bruce D. McCandliss – Developmental Science, 2024
Learning to read depends on the ability to extract precise details of letter combinations, which convey critical information that distinguishes tens of thousands of visual word forms. To support fluent reading skill, one crucial neural developmental process is one's brain sensitivity to statistical constraints inherent in combining letters into…
Descriptors: Alphabets, Reading Ability, Elementary Education, Visual Aids
Melis Çetinçelik; Caroline F. Rowland; Tineke M. Snijders – Developmental Science, 2024
The environment in which infants learn language is multimodal and rich with social cues. Yet, the effects of such cues, such as eye contact, on early speech perception have not been closely examined. This study assessed the role of ostensive speech, signalled through the speaker's eye gaze direction, on infants' word segmentation abilities. A…
Descriptors: Eye Movements, Infants, Nonverbal Communication, Word Recognition
Neural Correlates of Retrieval Practice on the Learning and Memory Retention of L3 French Vocabulary
Jiaxin Li; Er-Hu Zhang; Haihui Zhang; Xinyi He; Defeng Li; Hong-Wen Cao – International Journal of Multilingualism, 2024
This study used event-related potential (ERP) and retrieval practice effect paradigm to investigate the neurocognitive mechanisms underlying the retrieval practice effect in a third language (L3) vocabulary learning. Thirty-five Chinese (First Language, L1)-English (Second Language, L2) bilinguals without prior knowledge of French (L3) studied 120…
Descriptors: Brain, Information Retrieval, Recall (Psychology), Memory
Hsin-Hui Lu; Hong-Hsiang Liu; Feng-Ming Tsao – Developmental Science, 2024
This study examined how Mandarin-speaking preschoolers with and without a history of late talking (LT) process familiar monosyllabic words with unexpected lexical tones, focusing on both phonological and semantic violations. This study initially enrolled 64 Mandarin-speaking toddlers: 31 with a history of LT (mean age: 27.67 months) and 33 without…
Descriptors: Preschool Children, Delayed Speech, Mandarin Chinese, Cognitive Processes
Emily Corinne Saunders – ProQuest LLC, 2024
Prelingually and profoundly deaf individuals learn to read without complete access to the sounds of language. Nevertheless, many become proficient readers, and the neurocognitive underpinnings of deaf readers' processes differ from those of hearing readers, particularly in orthographic processing. In English, morphological structure is relatively…
Descriptors: Deafness, Morphology (Languages), Reading Processes, Brain Hemisphere Functions