The role of phonology during visual word learning in adults: An integrative review.

Clicks: 205
ID: 12459
2019
Throughout their lifetime, adults learn new words in their native lannguage, and potentially also in a second language. However, they do so with variable levels of success. In the auditory word learning literature, some of this variability has been attributed to phonological skills, including decoding and phonological short-term memory. Here I examine how the relationship between phonological skills and word learning applies to the visual modality. I define the availability of phonology in terms of (1) the extent to which it is biased by the learning environment, (2) the characteristics of the words to be learned, and (3) individual differences in phonological skills. Across these three areas of research, visual word learning improves when phonology is made more available to adult learners, suggesting that phonology can facilitate learning across modalities. However, the facilitation is largely specific to alphabetic languages, which have predictable sublexical correspondences between orthography and phonology. Therefore, I propose that phonology bootstraps visual word learning by providing a secondary code that constrains and refines developing orthographic representations.
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meade2019thepsychonomic Use this key to autocite in the manuscript while using SciMatic Manuscript Manager or Thesis Manager
Authors Meade, Gabriela;
Journal Psychonomic bulletin & review
Year 2019
DOI 10.3758/s13423-019-01647-0
URL
Keywords Keywords not found

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