The development of real-time spoken and word recognition derives from changes in ability, not maturation

IF 2.8 1区 心理学 Q1 PSYCHOLOGY, EXPERIMENTAL Cognition Pub Date : 2024-07-25 DOI:10.1016/j.cognition.2024.105899
Ethan Kutlu , Jamie Klein-Packard , Charlotte Jeppsen , J. Bruce Tomblin , Bob McMurray
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Abstract

In typical adults, recognizing both spoken and written words is thought to be served by a process of competition between candidates in the lexicon. In recent years, work has used eye-tracking in the visual world paradigm to characterize this competition process over development. It has shown that both spoken and written word recognition continue to develop through adolescence (Rigler et al., 2015). It is still unclear what drives these changes in real-time word recognition over the school years, as there are dramatic changes in language, the onset of reading instruction, and gains in domain general function during this time. This study began to address these issues by asking whether changes in real-time word recognition derive from changes in overall language and reading ability or reflect more general age-related development. This cross-sectional study examined 278 school-age children (Grades 1–3) using the Visual World Paradigm to assess both spoken and written word recognition, along with multiple measures of language, reading and phonology. A structural equation model applied to these ability measures found three factors representing language, reading, and phonology. Multiple regression analyses were used to understand how these three factors relate to real-time spoken and written word recognition as well as a non-linguistic variant of the VWP intended to capture decision speed, eye-movement factors, and other non-language/reading differences. We found that for both spoken and written word recognition, the speed of activating target words in both domains was more closely tied to the relevant ability (e.g., reading for written word recognition) than was age. We also examined competition resolution (how fully competitors were suppressed late in processing). Here, spoken word recognition showed only small, developmental effects that were only related to phonological processing, suggesting links to developmental language disorder. However, in written word recognition, competitor resolution showed large impacts of development which were strongly linked to reading. This suggests the dimensionality of real-time lexical processing may differ across domains. Importantly, neither spoken nor written word recognition is fully described by changes in non-linguistic skills assessed with non-linguistic VWP, and the non-linguistic VWP was linked to differences in language and reading. These findings suggest that spoken and written word recognition continue past the first year of life and are mostly driven by ability and not only by overall maturation.

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实时口语和单词识别能力的发展源于能力的变化,而不是成熟。
在典型的成年人中,识别口语和书面词语被认为是通过词典中候选词之间的竞争过程来实现的。近年来,有研究利用视觉世界范式中的眼动跟踪来描述这一竞争过程的发展特点。研究表明,口语和书面词语识别能力在青春期都会继续发展(Rigler 等人,2015 年)。目前还不清楚是什么原因导致了学龄期实时单词识别的变化,因为在此期间,语言、阅读教学的开始以及领域一般功能的提高都发生了巨大变化。为了解决这些问题,本研究开始探究实时认字能力的变化是源于整体语言和阅读能力的变化,还是反映了更普遍的与年龄相关的发展。这项横断面研究对 278 名学龄儿童(1-3 年级)进行了调查,使用视觉世界范式评估口语和书面文字识别能力,以及语言、阅读和语音方面的多种测量方法。一个结构方程模型应用于这些能力测量,发现了代表语言、阅读和语音的三个因素。通过多元回归分析,我们了解了这三个因素与实时口语和书面文字识别能力的关系,以及 VWP 的非语言变体与决策速度、眼动因素和其他非语言/阅读差异的关系。我们发现,在口语和书面文字识别中,激活目标词的速度与相关能力(如书面文字识别中的阅读能力)的关系比年龄更密切。我们还研究了竞争解决(竞争者在加工后期被抑制的程度)。在这里,口语单词识别只显示出与语音处理有关的微小的发育效应,这表明与发育性语言障碍有关。然而,在书面文字识别中,竞争者的解决对发展的影响很大,这与阅读密切相关。这表明实时词汇处理的维度在不同领域可能有所不同。重要的是,口语和书面文字识别能力都不能完全通过非语言万维网普查评估的非语言技能的变化来描述,而且非语言万维网普查与语言和阅读的差异有关。这些研究结果表明,口语和书面文字识别能力在出生后的第一年仍在继续,而且主要是由能力驱动的,而不仅仅是由整体成熟度驱动的。
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来源期刊
Cognition
Cognition PSYCHOLOGY, EXPERIMENTAL-
CiteScore
6.40
自引率
5.90%
发文量
283
期刊介绍: Cognition is an international journal that publishes theoretical and experimental papers on the study of the mind. It covers a wide variety of subjects concerning all the different aspects of cognition, ranging from biological and experimental studies to formal analysis. Contributions from the fields of psychology, neuroscience, linguistics, computer science, mathematics, ethology and philosophy are welcome in this journal provided that they have some bearing on the functioning of the mind. In addition, the journal serves as a forum for discussion of social and political aspects of cognitive science.
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