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The Importance of the First Letter in Children's Parafoveal Pre-processing in English: Is It Phonologically or Orthographically Driven?
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Phonological Parafoveal Pre-processing in Children Reading English Sentences
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Predictability effects and parafoveal processing of compound words in natural Chinese reading
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Eye movement control during learning and scanning of Landolt-C stimuli: Exposure frequency effects and spacing effects in a visual search task.
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Foveal and parafoveal processing of Chinese three-character idioms in reading
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Parafoveal Pre-processing in Children reading English: The Importance of External Letters
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Does diacritics‐based lexical disambiguation modulate word frequency, length, and predictability effects? An eye‐movements investigation of processing Arabic diacritics
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Initial landing position effects on Chinese word learning in children and adults
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The influence of children’s reading ability on initial letter position encoding during a reading-like task
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The importance of the positional probability of word final (but not word initial) characters for word segmentation and identification in children and adults' natural Chinese reading
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A comparison of reading, in people with simulated and actual central vision loss, with static text, horizontally-scrolling text and rapid serial visual presentation (RSVP)
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Co-Registration of Eye Movements and Fixation-Related Potentials in Natural Reading: Practical Issues of Experimental Design and Data Analysis
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Eye Movements of Children and Adults Reading in Three Different Orthographies
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The role of phonology in lexical access in teenagers with a history of dyslexia
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Abstract:
We examined phonological recoding during silent sentence reading in teenagers with a history of dyslexia and their typically developing peers. Two experiments are reported in which participants’ eye movements were recorded as they read sentences containing correctly spelled words (e.g., church), pseudohomophones (e.g., cherch), and spelling controls (e.g., charch). In Experiment 1 we examined foveal processing of the target word/nonword stimuli, and in Experiment 2 we examined parafoveal pre-processing. There were four participant groups–older teenagers with a history of dyslexia, older typically developing teenagers who were matched for age, younger typically developing teenagers who were matched for reading level, and younger teenagers with a history of dyslexia. All four participant groups showed a pseudohomophone advantage, both from foveal processing and parafoveal pre-processing, indicating that teenagers with a history of dyslexia engage in phonological recoding for lexical identification during silent sentence reading in a comparable manner to their typically developing peers.
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Keyword:
C800 - Psychology
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URL: https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0229934 http://clok.uclan.ac.uk/32596/ http://clok.uclan.ac.uk/32596/1/pone.0229934.pdf
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Semantic transparency modulates the processing of emotion words during Chinese reading: Evidence from eye movements
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Flexibility in the Perceptual Span during Reading: Evidence from Mongolian
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A co-registration investigation of inter-word spacing and parafoveal preview: Eye movements and fixation-related potentials
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Parafoveal Previews and Lexical Frequency in Natural Reading: Evidence from Eye Movements and Fixation-Related Potentials
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Reading sentences of words wtih rotated letters: An eye movement study
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