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Memory for item order and phonetic recoding in the beginning reader
Authors:Robert B Katz  Donald Shankweiler  Isabelle Y Liberman
Affiliation:1. Haskins Laboratories, New Haven, Connecticut 06510 USA;2. University of Connecticut USA
Abstract:A defect in immediate memory for item order is often attributed to poor beginning readers. We have supposed that this problem may be a manifestation of an underlying deficiency in the use of phonetic codes. Accordingly, we expected good and poor readers to differ in their ability to order stimuli that can be easily recoded as words and stored in phonetic form, but not in their ability to order nonlinguistic stimuli that do not lend themselves to phonetic recoding in short-term memory. The purpose of the present study was to test this hypothesis by examining the ability of good and poor readers to reconstruct the order of sets of briefly presented stimuli that varied in the extent to which they could be distinctively recoded into phonetic form: pictures of common objects versus nonrepresentational, “doodle” drawings. As expected, an interaction between reading ability and type of stimulus item was found, demonstrating the material-specific nature of poor readers' ordering difficulties. These findings support the hypothesis that a function of the phonetic representation is to aid in retention of order information, and that poor readers' ordering difficulties are related to their deficient use of phonetic codes.
Keywords:Requests for reprints should be sent to Danald Shankweiler   270 Crown St.   New Haven   CT 06510.
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