Katz R B
Department of Neurology, Boston University School of Medicine.
Cortex. 1990 Mar;26(1):65-76. doi: 10.1016/s0010-9452(13)80075-5.
Letter-by-letter readers can match spoken words to printed words they cannot read. Good word-matching ability may be attributable to a priming effect. However, since letter-by-letter readers have intact spelling ability, an alternative hypothesis is that word matching depends on a strategy of scanning printed words for recognizable letters known to be in the target items. In the present study, experimental manipulations that taxed the ability of the two subjects to process key letters (those that distinguished target words from foils) or scan for them caused a decline in word-matching performance. Thus, letter-by-letter readers may rely on sequential letter processing to accomplish cross-modality word matching.
逐字母阅读者能够将口语单词与他们无法认读的印刷单词进行匹配。良好的单词匹配能力可能归因于启动效应。然而,由于逐字母阅读者具有完整的拼写能力,另一种假设是单词匹配依赖于一种策略,即扫描印刷单词以寻找目标项目中已知的可识别字母。在本研究中,对两名受试者处理关键字母(即区分目标单词与干扰项的字母)或扫描这些字母的能力造成负担的实验操作导致单词匹配表现下降。因此,逐字母阅读者可能依赖于顺序字母处理来完成跨模态单词匹配。