Modeling item-level variance of polysyllabic word reading in developing readers: Exploring semantically related child, word, and child-by-word predictors

IF 1.8 2区 心理学 Q3 PSYCHOLOGY, DEVELOPMENTAL Journal of Experimental Child Psychology Pub Date : 2024-07-08 DOI:10.1016/j.jecp.2024.105998
Madison G. Kellenberger, Laura M. Steacy, Matthew J. Cooper Borkenhagen, Jordan Dozier, Donald L. Compton
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Abstract

Across word reading development, there are important and evolving relationships between oral and written semantic knowledge. Recent research has focused on these relationships, with accumulating evidence supporting the role of word knowledge and related word characteristics as important factors influencing polysyllabic word reading abilities. The purpose of this study was to investigate how semantic-related effects across child-level skills (e.g., general vocabulary knowledge), word-level properties (e.g., age of acquisition), child-by-word-level familiarity (e.g., item-level familiarity), and interactions between key child attributes and word characteristics (e.g., word reading skill by age of acquisition) contribute to polysyllabic word reading. Specifically, we emphasize the semantic contributions of word-level features to word reading development, which have been relatively underexplored in the literature. A sample of elementary school students oversampled for word reading difficulty (N = 92) in Grades 3 to 5 read a set of polysyllabic words (J = 45) and completed a battery of reading and language-related measures. Using cross-classified random-effects models and accounting for various control variables, semantic-related variables representing item-level familiarity; child-level set for variability; and word-level age of acquisition and number of morphemes were significant predictors in the main-effects model. A significant interaction between sight word efficiency and age of acquisition indicated higher probabilities of correctly reading polysyllabic words at lower levels of acquisition for better readers. Results indicate important semantic-related influences on polysyllabic word reading at the child, word, and child-by-word levels, suggesting meaningful relationships between knowledge of the orthographic form of a word and semantic knowledge in developing readers.

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发育期读者多音节词阅读的项目级差异建模:探索与语义相关的儿童、单词和儿童单词预测因素。
在单词阅读的发展过程中,口头和书面语义知识之间存在着重要的、不断发展的关系。最近的研究集中在这些关系上,越来越多的证据支持词汇知识和相关词汇特征是影响多音节词阅读能力的重要因素。本研究的目的是调查儿童水平的技能(如一般词汇知识)、单词水平的属性(如习得年龄)、儿童对单词水平的熟悉程度(如项目水平的熟悉程度)以及关键儿童属性和单词特征(如习得年龄的单词阅读技能)之间的交互作用对多音节词阅读的影响。具体而言,我们强调单词层面的语义特征对单词阅读发展的贡献,而这一点在文献中的研究相对不足。我们对三至五年级的小学生(N = 92)进行了词语阅读难度的超抽样调查,他们阅读了一组多音节词(J = 45),并完成了一系列与阅读和语言相关的测量。通过交叉分类随机效应模型并考虑各种控制变量,代表项目层面熟悉程度的语义相关变量、儿童层面的变异集、单词层面的习得年龄和词素数量在主效应模型中具有显著的预测作用。视词效率与习得年龄之间存在明显的交互作用,这表明,在较低的习得水平上,阅读能力较强的学生正确阅读多音节词的概率较高。研究结果表明,在儿童、单词和逐个单词的层面上,语义相关因素对多音节词的阅读都有重要影响,这表明在发展中的读者中,单词的正字法形式知识和语义知识之间存在着有意义的关系。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.50
自引率
7.70%
发文量
190
期刊介绍: The Journal of Experimental Child Psychology is an excellent source of information concerning all aspects of the development of children. It includes empirical psychological research on cognitive, social/emotional, and physical development. In addition, the journal periodically publishes Special Topic issues.
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