Studies have shown that letter position processing changes as reading develops. Whether these changes are driven by the development of the orthographic lexicon is currently unclear. In this study, we administered a novel variant of the Reicher-Wheeler task to children aged 7-12 years (Experiment 1) and adults (Experiment 2) to clarify the role of the developing lexicon in letter position processing. The task required participants to report the identity of a letter at a specified position within 3 orthographic contexts: anagram words (e.g., slime - which has the anagram partner, smile), pseudowords (e.g., blire - brile), and illegal nonwords (e.g., bfgsv - bsgfv). The influence of a reader's whole-word orthographic representations was investigated by comparing the performance of words to pseudowords (word superiority effect or WSE), and the influence of their knowledge of orthotactic constraints was investigated by comparing pseudowords to illegal nonwords (pseudoword superiority effect or PSE). While the PSE increased with developing orthographic skills (as indexed by irregular word reading) in primary schoolchildren, the WSE emerged only in adult readers. Furthermore, the size of the WSE increased with orthographic skill in adults. The findings are discussed in regards to current models and theories of visual word recognition and reading development. (PsycINFO Database Record
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1037/xhp0000273 | DOI Listing |
J Gen Intern Med
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Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, USA.
Obes Surg
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Torsby Hospital, Torsby, SE, Sweden.
HLA
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Immunology Unit, Clinical Analysis Department, Albacete University Hospital Complex, Albacete, Spain.
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Department of Physical Therapy, Faculty of Rehabilitation Medicine, University of Albert, 2-50 Corbett Hal, Edmonton, AB, T6G 2G4, Canada.
Proc ACM Symp User Interface Softw Tech
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Department of Computer Science, Stony Brook University New York, USA.
While gesture typing is widely adopted on touchscreen keyboards, its support for low vision users is limited. We have designed and implemented two keyboard prototypes, layout-magnified and key-magnified keyboards, to enable gesture typing for people with low vision. Both keyboards facilitate uninterrupted access to all keys while the screen magnifier is active, allowing people with low vision to input text with one continuous stroke.
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