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Levesque, Kyle C.; Breadmore, Helen L.; Deacon, S. Hélène – Journal of Research in Reading, 2021
A defining feature of language lies in its capacity to represent meaning across oral and written forms. Morphemes, the smallest units of meaning in a language, are the fundamental building blocks that encode meaning, and morphological skills enable their effective use in oral and written language. Increasing evidence indicates that morphological…
Descriptors: Morphology (Languages), Reading Comprehension, Spelling, Reading Processes
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Murray, Bruce A.; McIlwain, Mary Jane; Wang, Chih-hsuan; Murray, Geralyn; Finley, Stacie – Journal of Research in Reading, 2019
Learning irregular words involves mental marking of irregular letters in the spelling, a process not fully understood. In a within-subjects experiment, we manipulated the type of scaffolding given to beginning readers to evoke mental marking. We pretested to sort 103 kindergarten and first-grade participants into sequential decoders, who decode…
Descriptors: Kindergarten, Elementary School Students, Grade 1, Emergent Literacy
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Chen, Minglei; Ko, Hwawei – Journal of Research in Reading, 2011
This study was to investigate Chinese children's eye patterns while reading different text genres from a developmental perspective. Eye movements were recorded while children in the second through sixth grades read two expository texts and two narrative texts. Across passages, overall word frequency was not significantly different between the two…
Descriptors: Reading Comprehension, Eye Movements, Word Frequency, Literary Genres
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McKague, Meredith; Davis, Chris; Pratt, Chris; Johnston, Michael B. – Journal of Research in Reading, 2008
Skilled readers were trained to recognise either the oral (n=44) or visual form (n=40) of a set of 32 novel words (oral and visual instantiation, respectively). Training involved learning the "meanings" for the instantiated words and was followed by a visual lexical decision task in which the instantiated words were mixed with real English words…
Descriptors: Phonemes, Phonology, Feedback (Response), Phoneme Grapheme Correspondence
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Martin-Chang, Sandra Lyn; Gould, Odette N. – Journal of Research in Reading, 2008
Undergraduates (N = 171) completed a revised version of the Author Recognition Test (Stanovich & West, 1989). The resulting print exposure scores were divided into two dimensions: personal reading experience (primary print knowledge--PPK) and secondary print knowledge (SPK). Both PPK and SPK were correlated with print exposure, but not with…
Descriptors: Reading Rate, Reading Comprehension, Undergraduate Students, Correlation
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Castles, Anne; Bates, Timothy; Coltheart, Max; Luciano, Michelle; Martin, Nicholas G. – Journal of Research in Reading, 2006
While it is well known that reading is highly heritable, less has been understood about the bases of these genetic influences. In this paper, we review the research that we have been conducting in recent years to examine genetic and environmental influences on the particular reading processes specified in the "dual-route" cognitive model of…
Descriptors: Environmental Influences, Reading, Reading Processes, Genetics
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Ashby, Jane – Journal of Research in Reading, 2006
Recent eye movement experiments offer preliminary evidence that skilled readers activate word-level prosodic information when silently reading sentences. This paper reviews the role of eye movements during reading as well as the preliminary evidence for prosodic processing. A new experiment examines whether prosodic processing differs for high and…
Descriptors: Syllables, Silent Reading, Sentences, Eye Movements
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Freebody, Peter; Freiberg, Jill – Journal of Research in Reading, 2001
Explores issues arising from the long-standing theoretical and empirical attention to reading as a specifiable set of psychological processes, and the consequences of this attention for parents' and educators' deliberations and practices. Concludes that theories of reading need to deal fundamentally with the practices that learners, teachers and…
Descriptors: Activities, Cognitive Processes, Elementary Education, Family Literacy
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Goetry, Vincent; Wade-Woolley, Lesly; Kolinsky, Regine; Mousty, Philippe – Journal of Research in Reading, 2006
French and Dutch differ regarding the manifestations and lexical functions of the stress pattern of words. The present study examined group differences in stress processing abilities between French-native and Dutch-native listeners, thus extending previous cross-linguistic comparisons involving Spanish-native and French-native adults. The results…
Descriptors: Indo European Languages, French, Reading Processes, Phonology