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Children and adults both see ‘pirates’ in ‘parties’: letter‐position effects for developing readers and skilled adult readers
Author(s) -
Paterson Kevin B.,
Read Josephine,
McGowan Victoria A.,
Jordan Timothy R.
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
developmental science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.801
H-Index - 127
eISSN - 1467-7687
pISSN - 1363-755X
DOI - 10.1111/desc.12222
Subject(s) - anagrams , anagram , reading (process) , psychology , task (project management) , word (group theory) , position (finance) , similarity (geometry) , cognitive psychology , linguistics , computer science , artificial intelligence , philosophy , management , finance , economics , image (mathematics)
Developing readers often make anagrammatical errors (e.g. misreading pirates as parties ), suggesting they use letter position flexibly during word recognition. However, while it is widely assumed that the occurrence of these errors decreases with increases in reading skill, empirical evidence to support this distinction is lacking. Accordingly, we compared the performance of developing child readers (aged 8–10 years) against the end‐state performance of skilled adult readers in a timed naming task, employing anagrams used previously in this area of research. Moreover, to explore the use of letter position by developing readers and skilled adult readers more fully, we used anagrams which, to form another word, required letter transpositions over only interior letter positions, or both interior and exterior letter positions. The patterns of effects across these two anagram types for the two groups of readers were very similar. In particular, both groups showed similarly slowed response times (and developing readers increased errors) for anagrams requiring only interior letter transpositions but not for anagrams that required exterior letter transpositions. This similarity in the naming performance of developing readers and skilled adult readers suggests that the end‐state skilled use of letter position is established earlier during reading development than is widely assumed.