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Hall, Vernon; Caldwell, Edward – 1970
Research indicates that young children seem to have considerable difficulty in discrimination between the letters b, c, p, and q. Also, 4-year-olds appear to commonly make rotation and reversal errors with letter-like forms. Whether young children will perform significantly better or not in deciding whether two shapes are called same or different…
Descriptors: Character Recognition, Children, Nursery Schools, Orthographic Symbols
Lesgold, Alan M.; Danner, Frederick – 1976
In order to understand the process of reading, it is important to determine how strings of letters are perceived. This study tests the hypothesis that units of visual perception may include pairs of letters and perhaps even high-frequency, monosyllabic trigrams (three-letter sequences). Participants were asked to report the names of either single…
Descriptors: Character Recognition, College Students, Decoding (Reading), Reading Processes
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Abrams, S. G.; Zuber, B. L. – Reading Research Quarterly, 1972
Descriptors: Character Recognition, Cognitive Processes, Eye Movements, Information Processing
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Massaro, Dominic W.; And Others – 1977
The studies reported here examined the role of orthographic regularity and summed positional frequency in the perception of letter strings. College sophomores and sixth graders were asked to indicate whether or not a target letter was present in a six-letter string. Orthographic regularity and summed positional frequency were found to have no…
Descriptors: Character Recognition, College Students, Grade 6, Letters (Alphabet)