The Changing Role of Phonology in Reading Development.

Q2 Medicine Vision (Switzerland) Pub Date : 2019-05-30 DOI:10.3390/vision3020023
Sara V Milledge, Hazel I Blythe
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引用次数: 13

Abstract

Processing of both a word's orthography (its printed form) and phonology (its associated speech sounds) are critical for lexical identification during reading, both in beginning and skilled readers. Theories of learning to read typically posit a developmental change, from early readers' reliance on phonology to more skilled readers' development of direct orthographic-semantic links. Specifically, in becoming a skilled reader, the extent to which an individual processes phonology during lexical identification is thought to decrease. Recent data from eye movement research suggests, however, that the developmental change in phonological processing is somewhat more nuanced than this. Such studies show that phonology influences lexical identification in beginning and skilled readers in both typically and atypically developing populations. These data indicate, therefore, that the developmental change might better be characterised as a transition from overt decoding to abstract, covert recoding. We do not stop processing phonology as we become more skilled at reading; rather, the nature of that processing changes.

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语音学在阅读发展中不断变化的作用。
无论是初学者还是熟练读者,在阅读过程中,对单词的正字法(印刷形式)和音韵学(相关语音)的处理都对词汇识别至关重要。学习阅读的理论通常假设了一种发展变化,从早期读者对音韵学的依赖到更熟练的读者对直接正字法语义联系的发展。具体来说,在成为一名熟练的读者时,个人在词汇识别过程中处理音韵学的程度会降低。然而,眼动研究的最新数据表明,语音处理的发展变化比这更微妙。这些研究表明,在典型和非典型发展人群中,音韵学影响初学和熟练读者的词汇识别。因此,这些数据表明,发展变化可能更好地被描述为从显性解码到抽象、隐性编码的转变。随着我们阅读能力的提高,我们并没有停止处理音韵学;相反,这种处理的性质发生了变化。
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来源期刊
Vision (Switzerland)
Vision (Switzerland) Health Professions-Optometry
CiteScore
2.30
自引率
0.00%
发文量
62
审稿时长
11 weeks
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