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Harris, Lindsay N.; Perfetti, Charles A. – Scientific Studies of Reading, 2017
Share (1995) proposed "phonological recoding" (the translation of letters into sounds) as a self-teaching mechanism through which readers establish complete lexical representations. More recently, McKague et al. (2008) proposed a similar role for "orthographic recoding", that is, feedback from sounds to letters, in building and…
Descriptors: Individual Differences, Phonological Awareness, Feedback (Response), Evidence
Balass, Michal; Nelson, Jessica R.; Perfetti, Charles A. – Contemporary Educational Psychology, 2010
Adults of varying reading comprehension skill learned a set of previously unknown rare English words (e.g., "gloaming") in three different learning conditions in which the type of word knowledge was manipulated. The words were presented in one of three conditions: (1) orthography-to-meaning (no phonology); (2) orthography-to-phonology (no…
Descriptors: Reading Comprehension, Phonology, Familiarity, Word Processing
Xu, Yi; Chang, Li-Yun; Zhang, Juan; Perfetti, Charles A. – Foreign Language Annals, 2013
Previous studies suggest that writing helps reading development in Chinese in both first and second language settings by enabling higher-quality orthographic representation of the characters. This study investigated the comparative effectiveness of reading, animation, and writing in developing foreign language learners' orthographic knowledge…
Descriptors: Orthographic Symbols, Chinese, Second Language Instruction, Prior Learning
Guan, Connie Qun; Liu, Ying; Chan, Derek Ho Leung; Ye, Feifei; Perfetti, Charles A. – Journal of Educational Psychology, 2011
Learning to write words may strengthen orthographic representations and thus support word-specific recognition processes. This hypothesis applies especially to Chinese because its writing system encourages character-specific recognition that depends on accurate representation of orthographic form. We report 2 studies that test this hypothesis in…
Descriptors: Phonology, Handwriting, Written Language, Adult Basic Education
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

Berent, Iris; Perfetti, Charles A. – Psychological Review, 1995
A model of phonological assembly is proposed that postulates a multilineal representation that segregates consonants and vowels in different planes. This representation determines the online process of assembly. Claims of the model are supported by a series of English-masking and English-priming experiments involving about 175 college students.…
Descriptors: College Students, Consonants, English, Higher Education
Perfetti, Charles A.; Liu, Ying; Tan, Li Hai – Psychological Review, 2005
The authors examine the implications of research on Chinese for theories of reading and propose the lexical constituency model as a general framework for word reading across writing systems. Word identities are defined by 3 interlinked constituents (orthographic, phonological, and semantic). The implemented model simulates the time course of…
Descriptors: Written Language, Phonology, Reading Processes, Semantics

Perfetti, Charles A.; Tan, Li-Hai – Reading and Writing: An Interdisciplinary Journal, 1998
Considers specific aspects of phonological and orthographic processing in Chinese that may differ from those in English. Emphasizes that early phonological processes and phonological mediation are two different questions in the identification-with-phonology hypothesis. Shows that "mediation" and "prelexical phonology," two very…
Descriptors: Chinese, Language Processing, Language Research, Linguistic Theory

Perfetti, Charles A. – Journal of Research in Reading, 1995
Discusses four clear contributions of cognitive research that deserve special attention: (1) skilled readers read words rather than skip them; (2) less skilled readers do rely on context; (3) skilled readers use phonology in reading; and (4) children learn to read successfully by learning how their writing system works. (RS)
Descriptors: Cognitive Psychology, Context Clues, Elementary Education, Literature Reviews
Perfetti, Charles A. – 1976
A corollary of the principle that reading comprehension depends on language comprehension is that word skill plus language comprehension skill produces reading comprehension skill. This corollary points to word decoding as being the major source of differences in skilled reading. Various data supporting this claim have been collected from…
Descriptors: Decoding (Reading), Elementary Education, Language Skills, Phonology
Perfetti, Charles A.; Liu, Ying – Reading and Writing: An Interdisciplinary Journal, 2005
According to the Universal Writing System Constraint, all writing systems encode language, and thus reflect basic properties of the linguistic system they encode. According to a second universal, the Universal Phonological Principle, the activation of word pronunciations occurs for skilled readers across all writing systems. We review recent…
Descriptors: Phonology, Semantics, Written Language, Reading Processes

Wang, Min; Koda, Keiko; Perfetti, Charles A. – Cognition, 2003
Examined Korean and Chinese college-level ESL learners for relative reliance on phonological and orthographic processing in English word identification. Found that Korean, but not Chinese, students made more false positive errors in judging stimuli that were homophones to category exemplars than in judging spelling controls. Chinese students made…
Descriptors: Chinese, College Students, Comparative Analysis, English (Second Language)
McCutchen, Deborah; Perfetti, Charles A. – 1983
The assumption that phonological processes support comprehension guided two experiments in manipulating the similarity of the consonant code both within silently read sentences and between these sentences and concurrently vocalized phrases. The first experiment examined whether tongue-twisters would take longer to read than phonetically…
Descriptors: Cognitive Style, College Students, Decoding (Reading), Language Processing
Perfetti, Charles A.; Marron, Maureen A. – 1995
Analysis of research literature shows both important commonalities and differences between how children learn to read and how adults can be taught to read in literacy programs. Both the narrow and broad definitions of literacy are legitimate for specific purposes. The narrow definition identifies literacy acquisition with learning how the writing…
Descriptors: Adult Basic Education, Adult Learning, Adult Literacy, Beginning Reading
Wang, Min; Perfetti, Charles A.; Liu, Ying – Cognition, 2005
This study investigated cross-language and writing system relationship in biliteracy acquisition of children learning to read two different writing systems--Chinese and English. Forty-six Mandarin-speaking children were tested for their first language (Chinese-L1) and second language (English-L2) reading skills. Comparable experiments in Chinese…
Descriptors: Written Language, Phonology, Writing Skills, Reading Skills