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Educational Psychology
An International Journal of Experimental Educational Psychology
Volume 24, 2004 - Issue 6
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Original Articles

Vocabulary, Context, and Speech Perception Among Good and Poor Readers

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Pages 825-843 | Published online: 05 Oct 2010
 

Abstract

This study examined the interaction between speech perception and sentential context among 13 poor readers and 49 good readers in grades one to three. Children's performance was examined on tasks assessing expressive and receptive vocabulary, reading skill, phonological awareness, pseudoword repetition, and phoneme identification. Good readers showed clearly defined categorical perception in the phoneme identification task for both sentence frames biased to the identification of the /b/ or /p/ phoneme. The /b/–/p/ category boundary for the BATH frame was at longer voice onset times (VOTs) than the boundary for PATH frame. Poor readers showed less sharply defined categorical perception with both sentence frames. Although poor readers did not show a shift in the /b/–/p/ category boundary, sentential context did affect the overall rate with which phonemes were identified as /b/ or /p/ at each VOT. These findings suggest that semantic information may operate as a compensatory mechanism for resolving ambiguities in speech perception. Furthermore, expressive vocabulary was more closely related than receptive vocabulary to individual differences in reading and phonological processing, providing support for the phonological distinctness hypothesis.

Notes

Corresponding author. Department of Education, 2034 Berkeley Place, University of California, Irvine, CA 92697‐5500 USA. Email: [email protected]

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