Author:
Mitterer Holger,Arunkumar Mrudula,van Paridon Jeroen,Huettig Falk
Abstract
How do different levels of representation interact in the mind? Key evidence for answering this question comes from experimental work that investigates the influence of knowledge of written language on spoken language processing. Here we tested whether learning orthographic representations (through reading) influences pre-lexical phonological representations in spoken-word recognition using a perceptual learning paradigm. Perceptual learning is well suited to reveal differences in pre-lexical representations that might be caused by learning to read because it requires the functional use of pre-lexical representations in order to generalize a learning experience. In a large-scale behavioural study in Chennai, India, 97 native speakers of Tamil with varying reading experience (from completely illiterate to highly literate) participated. In marked contrast to their performance in other cognitive tasks, even completely illiterate participants showed a perceptual learning effect that was not moderated by reading experience. This finding suggests that pre-lexical phonological representations are not substantially changed by learning to read and thus poses important constraints for the debate about the degree of interactivity between different levels of representations during human information processing.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Reference73 articles.
1. Competition from unseen or unheard novel words: Lexical consolidation across modalities;Journal of Memory and Language,2014
2. Copying helps novice learners build orthographic knowledge: Methods for teaching Devanagari akshara;Reading and Writing,2018
3. Bhuvaneshwar, B. , & Padakannaya, P. (2013). Reading in Tamil: A more alphabetic and less syllabic akshara-based orthography. In H. Winskel & P. Padakannaya (Eds.), South and Southeast Asian Psycholinguistics (pp. 192–211). Cambridge University Press.
4. Bos, 4294967295, Spelberg, 4294967295 Lutje, Scheepstra, 4294967295, & Vries, J. R. de . (1994). De Klepel, een test voor de leesvaardigheid van pseudowoorden Verantwoording, handleiding, diagnostiek en behandeling. Berkhout.
5. Gradient acoustic information induces long-lasting referential uncertainty in short discourses;Language, Cognition and Neuroscience,2017