Literature DB >> 16115645

Influence of consonantal context on the reading of vowels: evidence from children.

Rebecca Treiman1, Brett Kessler, Jason D Zevin, Suzanne Bick, Melissa Davis.   

Abstract

When college students pronounce nonwords, their vowel pronunciations may be affected not only by the consonant that follows the vowel, the coda, but also by the preceding consonant, the onset. We presented the nonwords used by Treiman and colleagues in their 2003 study to a total of 94 first graders, third graders, fifth graders, and high school students to determine when these context influences emerge. According to some theories of reading development, early decoding is characterized by context-free links from graphemes to phonemes. However, we found that even children reading at the first-grade level (6-year-olds) were influenced to some extent by a vowel's context. The effect of context on vowel pronunciation increased in strength up to around the fifth-grade reading level (8- and 9-year-olds), and sensitivity to coda-to-vowel associations emerged no earlier than did sensitivity to onset-to-vowel associations. A connectionist model of reading reproduced this general pattern of increasing context effects as a function of training.

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Year:  2005        PMID: 16115645     DOI: 10.1016/j.jecp.2005.06.008

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Exp Child Psychol        ISSN: 0022-0965


  9 in total

1.  The nature of skilled adult reading varies with type of instruction in childhood.

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2.  Statistical Learning, Letter Reversals, and Reading.

Authors:  Rebecca Treiman; Jessica Gordon; Richard Boada; Robin L Peterson; Bruce F Pennington
Journal:  Sci Stud Read       Date:  2014

3.  Linguistic pattern analysis of misspellings of typically developing writers in grades 1-9.

Authors:  Ruth Huntley Bahr; Elaine R Sillian; Virginia W Berninger; Michael Dow
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4.  Development and Prediction of Context-Dependent Vowel Pronunciation in Elementary Readers.

Authors:  Laura M Steacy; Donald L Compton; Yaacov Petscher; James D Elliott; Kathryn Smith; Jay G Rueckl; Oliver Sawi; Stephen J Frost; Kenneth R Pugh
Journal:  Sci Stud Read       Date:  2018-05-15

Review 5.  Linking Behavioral and Computational Approaches to Better Understand Variant Vowel Pronunciations in Developing Readers.

Authors:  Donald L Compton; Laura M Steacy; Yaacov Petscher; Jay G Rueckl; Nicole Landi; Ken R Pugh
Journal:  New Dir Child Adolesc Dev       Date:  2019-05-08

6.  Simulating Language-specific and Language-general Effects in a Statistical Learning Model of Chinese Reading.

Authors:  Jianfeng Yang; Bruce D McCandliss; Hua Shu; Jason D Zevin
Journal:  J Mem Lang       Date:  2009-08-02       Impact factor: 3.059

7.  Initial validation of a measure of decoding difficulty as a unique predictor of miscues and passage reading fluency.

Authors:  Neena M Saha; Laurie Cutting; Stephanie Del Tufo; Stephen Bailey
Journal:  Read Writ       Date:  2020-08-06

8.  Technology-Based Tools for English Literacy Intervention: Examining Intervention Grain Size and Individual Differences.

Authors:  Beth A O'Brien; Malikka Habib; Luca Onnis
Journal:  Front Psychol       Date:  2019-11-26

9.  Variations in the use of simple and context-sensitive grapheme-phoneme correspondences in English and German developing readers.

Authors:  Xenia Schmalz; Serje Robidoux; Anne Castles; Eva Marinus
Journal:  Ann Dyslexia       Date:  2020-01-18
  9 in total

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