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Isidora Castillo-Rabanal; Maxi Heitmayer – European Journal of Education, 2025
Literacy skills are acquired during childhood through 'code-related activities', which are interactions and practices that directly engage children with written words. This study presents a scoping review and meta-analysis of 18 peer-reviewed articles that explore the relationship between these code-related activities and early literacy skills.…
Descriptors: Emergent Literacy, Reading Processes, Learning Activities, Skill Development
Victor Almeida Rodrigues Gomes – ProQuest LLC, 2024
Given its complexity, abstractness, and central role in many logics, negation might be a conceptual accomplishment. Therefore, young children's gradual acquisition of negation words might be due to their undergoing a conceptual change that is necessary to represent logical meanings. However, it's also possible that expressing negation takes time…
Descriptors: Sentence Structure, Language Acquisition, Grammar, Reading Processes
Roderick Peele; Kindel Turner Nash – Reading Teacher, 2025
Culture and language shape the way people read. Yet, within many popular reading models of reading development, culture is a component, if featured at all. Illustrated through examples of pro-Black, culturally sustaining, emancipatory practices of one teacher, this article highlights the Cultural Sustenance View of Reading, a reader model that can…
Descriptors: Reading Research, Reading Processes, Cultural Influences, Reading Teachers
Li, Nan; Sun, Dongxia; Wang, Suiping – Reading and Writing: An Interdisciplinary Journal, 2023
In natural reading, the processing of words in fixation is influenced by semantic information obtained through preview (i.e., the semantic preview effect). Previous studies have confirmed that two types of semantic information exhibit the semantic preview effect: semantic association, which is reflected by the semantic relationship between preview…
Descriptors: Chinese, Semantics, Reading Processes, Sentences
Margaret Mackey – Literacy, 2025
Louise Rosenblatt's well-known concept of stance distinguishes between efferent reading (reading to take something away from the text) and aesthetic reading (reading for the experience of dwelling in the text). This article proposes a refinement to this binary, adding the concept of afferent reading. Afference, in biology, means a bringing-to, and…
Descriptors: Reading Processes, Reading Comprehension, Reader Text Relationship, Story Reading
Jianping Xiong; Ping Ju; Yongqing Hou; Antao Chen – Reading and Writing: An Interdisciplinary Journal, 2025
Inhibitory control ability may affect the orthographic neighborhood size (ONS) effect by inhibiting the semantic activation of neighbors. However, few studies have explored whether and how inhibitory control plays a role in the ONS effect on recognition of Chinese words. This study screened individuals with high and low inhibitory control…
Descriptors: Inhibition, Chinese, Vocabulary Development, Orthographic Symbols
Amani Talwar – Adult Literacy Education, 2024
The science of reading refers to the extensive body of research on how we learn to read and the most effective methods for teaching reading. Our knowledge of what works in reading instruction is based on decades of rigorous, scientifically based research in the fields of education, cognitive psychology, and neuroscience. This research digest…
Descriptors: Reading Research, Adult Education, Reading Instruction, Cognitive Psychology
Signy Wegener; Anne Castles; Elisabeth Beyersmann; Kate Nation; Hua-Chen Wang; Erik D. Reichle – Reading Research Quarterly, 2025
Spreading out study opportunities over time improves the retention of verbal material compared to consecutive study, yet little is known about the influence of temporal spacing on orthographic learning specifically. The current study addressed four questions: (1) do readers' eye movements during orthographic learning differ under spaced and massed…
Descriptors: Eye Movements, Simulation, Intervals, Orthographic Symbols
Diane C. Mézière; Lili Yu; Titus von der Malsburg; Erik D. Reichle; Genevieve McArthur – Reading Research Quarterly, 2025
Recent research on the use of eye movements to predict performance on reading comprehension tasks suggests that while eye movements may be used to measure comprehension, the relationship between eye-movement behavior and comprehension is influenced by differences in task demands between comprehension measures. In this study, we examined the…
Descriptors: Eye Movements, Reading Processes, Predictor Variables, Reading Comprehension
Ángel Javier Tabullo; Gastón Ignacio Saux; María Rufina Pearson – Journal of Research in Reading, 2025
Background: Internet documents are characterised by their non-linear hyperlink structure, which allows for more flexible reading, at the cost of higher cognitive loads. Linear text reading comprehension skills contribute to hypertext comprehension (either directly or through its impact on navigation behaviours) but cannot fully account for its…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Executive Function, Reading Comprehension, Hypermedia
Jon M. Wargo – Language Arts, 2025
In this article, the author examines how young learners became critical information architects for presenting community and classroom data. The article begins with an overview of the literature on critical literacy, critical data literacy, and young children's visual cultures. Next, it lays out the project's context, modes of inquiry, and methods…
Descriptors: Childrens Literature, Young Children, Reading Processes, Critical Reading
Luo, Yingyi; Tan, Dixiao; Yan, Ming – Reading and Writing: An Interdisciplinary Journal, 2023
Recent studies have demonstrated that saccadic programming in reading is not only determined by low-level visual factors. High-level morphological effects on saccade have been shown in two morphologically rich languages. In the present study, we examined the underlying mechanism of such morphological influences by comparing the processes of…
Descriptors: Morphology (Languages), Reading Processes, Eye Movements, Chinese
Roslyn Wong; Aaron Veldre; Sally Andrews – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2024
Evidence of processing costs for unexpected words presented in place of a more expected completion remains elusive in the eye-movement literature. The current study investigated whether such prediction error costs depend on the source of constraint violation provided by the prior context. Participants' eye movements were recorded as they read…
Descriptors: Reading Processes, Eye Movements, Prediction, Probability
Bailing Lyu; Matthew T. McCrudden; Catherine Bohn-Gettler – Reading and Writing: An Interdisciplinary Journal, 2024
In educational settings, students read for multiple purposes, such as preparing for an exam, practicing a new reading strategy, writing an essay, and more. Because reading is a goal-directed activity, providing students with task instructions can help them create goals for reading and develop a plan to meet these goals. In the current experiment,…
Descriptors: Reading Processes, Reading Instruction, Teaching Methods, Cognitive Processes
Tianlin Wang; Matthew J. Cooper Borkenhagen; Madison Barker; Mark S. Seidenberg – Grantee Submission, 2022
Many characters in written Chinese incorporate components (radicals) that provide cues to meaning. These cues are often partial, and some are misleading because they are unrelated to the character's meaning. Previous studies have shown that radicals influence the reader's processing of the characters in which they occur (e.g., Feldman and Siok in…
Descriptors: Chinese, Orthographic Symbols, Misconceptions, Semantics