Automatic activation of phonology in silent reading is parallel: evidence from beginning and skilled readers |
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Authors: | Alario F-Xavier De Cara Bruno Ziegler Johannes C |
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Affiliation: | Laboratoire de Psychologie Cognitive, CNRS UMR 6146, Université de Provence, 13331 Marseille Cedex 3, France. francois-xavier.alario@univ-provence.fr |
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Abstract: | The picture-word interference paradigm was used to shed new light on the debate concerning slow serial versus fast parallel activation of phonology in silent reading. Prereaders, beginning readers (Grades 1-4), and adults named pictures that had words printed on them. Words and pictures shared phonology either at the beginnings of words (e.g., DOLL-DOG) or at the ends of words (e.g., FOG-DOG). The results showed that phonological overlap between primes and targets facilitated picture naming. This facilitatory effect was present even in beginning readers. More important, from Grade 1 onward, end-related facilitation always was as strong as beginning-related facilitation. This result suggests that, from the beginning of reading, the implicit and automatic activation of phonological codes during silent reading is not serial but rather parallel. |
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Keywords: | Language acquisition Phonology Psycholinguistics Speech/Speech perception Learning |
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