Episodic traces and statistical regularities: Paired associate learning in typical and dyslexic readers
Allbwn ymchwil: Cyfraniad at gyfnodolyn › Erthygl › adolygiad gan gymheiriaid
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Yn: Cognition, Cyfrol 177, 08.2018, t. 214-225.
Allbwn ymchwil: Cyfraniad at gyfnodolyn › Erthygl › adolygiad gan gymheiriaid
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TY - JOUR
T1 - Episodic traces and statistical regularities
T2 - Paired associate learning in typical and dyslexic readers
AU - Jones, Manon
AU - Kuipers, J.R.
AU - Nugent, Sinead
AU - Miley, Angelina
AU - Oppenheim, Gary
PY - 2018/8
Y1 - 2018/8
N2 - Learning visual-phonological associations is a key skillunderlying successful reading acquisition. However, we are yet tounderstand the cognitive mechanisms that enable efficient learning ingood readers, and those which are aberrant in individuals withdevelopmental dyslexia. Here, we use a repeated cued-recall task toexamine how typical and reading-impaired adults acquire novelassociations between visual and phonological stimuli, incorporating alooking-at-nothing paradigm to probe implicit memory for targetlocations. Cued recall accuracy revealed that typical readers' recall ofnovel phonological associates was better than dyslexic readers' recall,and it also improved more with repetition. Eye fixation-contingent erroranalyses suggest that typical readers' greater improvement fromrepetition reflects their more robust encoding and/or retrieval of eachinstance in which a given pair was presented: whereas dyslexic readerstended to recall a phonological target better when fixating its mostrecent location, typical readers showed this pattern more strongly whenthe target location was consistent across multiple trials. Thus, typicalreaders' greater success in reading acquisition may derive from theirbetter use of statistical contingencies to identify consistent stimulusfeatures across multiple exposures. We discuss these findings in relationto the role of implicit memory in forming new visual-phonologicalassociations as a foundational skill in reading, and areas of weakness indevelopmental dyslexia.
AB - Learning visual-phonological associations is a key skillunderlying successful reading acquisition. However, we are yet tounderstand the cognitive mechanisms that enable efficient learning ingood readers, and those which are aberrant in individuals withdevelopmental dyslexia. Here, we use a repeated cued-recall task toexamine how typical and reading-impaired adults acquire novelassociations between visual and phonological stimuli, incorporating alooking-at-nothing paradigm to probe implicit memory for targetlocations. Cued recall accuracy revealed that typical readers' recall ofnovel phonological associates was better than dyslexic readers' recall,and it also improved more with repetition. Eye fixation-contingent erroranalyses suggest that typical readers' greater improvement fromrepetition reflects their more robust encoding and/or retrieval of eachinstance in which a given pair was presented: whereas dyslexic readerstended to recall a phonological target better when fixating its mostrecent location, typical readers showed this pattern more strongly whenthe target location was consistent across multiple trials. Thus, typicalreaders' greater success in reading acquisition may derive from theirbetter use of statistical contingencies to identify consistent stimulusfeatures across multiple exposures. We discuss these findings in relationto the role of implicit memory in forming new visual-phonologicalassociations as a foundational skill in reading, and areas of weakness indevelopmental dyslexia.
U2 - 10.1016/j.cognition.2018.04.010
DO - 10.1016/j.cognition.2018.04.010
M3 - Article
VL - 177
SP - 214
EP - 225
JO - Cognition
JF - Cognition
SN - 0010-0277
ER -