Kezilas Yvette, McKague Meredith, Kohnen Saskia, Badcock Nicholas A, Castles Anne
Department of Cognitive Science, ARC Centre of Excellence in Cognition and its Disorders, Macquarie University.
Melbourne School of Psychological Sciences, The University of Melbourne.
J Exp Psychol Learn Mem Cogn. 2017 Feb;43(2):250-258. doi: 10.1037/xlm0000293. Epub 2016 Jul 18.
Masked transposed-letter (TL) priming effects have been used to index letter position processing over the course of reading development. Whereas some studies have reported an increase in TL priming over development, others have reported a decrease. These findings have led to the development of 2 somewhat contradictory accounts of letter position development: the lexical tuning hypothesis and the multiple-route model. One factor that may be contributing to these discrepancies is the use of baseline primes that substitute letters in the target word, which may confound the effect of changes in letter position processing over development with those of letter identity. The present study included an identity prime (e.g., listen-LISTEN), in addition to the standard two-substituted-letter (2SL; e.g., lidfen-LISTEN) and all-letter-different (ALD; e.g., rodfup-LISTEN) baselines, to remove the potential confound between letter position and letter identity information in determining the effect of the TL prime. Priming effects were measured in a lexical decision task administered to children aged 7-12 and a group of university students. Using inverse transformed response times, targets preceded by a TL prime were responded to significantly faster than those preceded by 2SL and ALD primes, and priming remained stable across development. In contrast, targets preceded by a TL prime were responded to significantly slower than those preceded by an ID prime, and this reaction-time cost increased significantly over development, with adults showing the largest cost. These findings are consistent with a lexical tuning account of letter position development, and are inconsistent with the multiple-route model. (PsycINFO Database Record
掩蔽的字母颠倒(TL)启动效应已被用于衡量阅读发展过程中的字母位置加工情况。一些研究报告称,随着发展,TL启动效应会增强,而另一些研究则报告其会减弱。这些发现导致了对字母位置发展的两种略有矛盾的解释:词汇调整假说和多路径模型。可能导致这些差异的一个因素是使用了在目标词中替换字母的基线启动词,这可能会使字母位置加工发展变化的影响与字母识别的影响相互混淆。本研究除了标准的双字母替换(2SL;例如,lidfen-LISTEN)和全字母不同(ALD;例如,rod-fup-LISTEN)基线外,还纳入了一个识别启动词(例如,listen-LISTEN),以消除在确定TL启动效应时字母位置和字母识别信息之间的潜在混淆。在对7至12岁儿童和一组大学生进行的词汇判断任务中测量启动效应。使用逆变换反应时间,TL启动词后的目标反应速度明显快于2SL和ALD启动词后的目标,并且启动效应在整个发展过程中保持稳定。相比之下,TL启动词后的目标反应速度明显慢于ID启动词后的目标,并且这种反应时成本在发展过程中显著增加,成年人的成本最高。这些发现与字母位置发展的词汇调整解释一致,与多路径模型不一致。(PsycINFO数据库记录)