Lost in the forest? Global to local interference depends on children's reading skills
- PMID: 30576984
- DOI: 10.1016/j.actpsy.2018.12.003
Lost in the forest? Global to local interference depends on children's reading skills
Abstract
We studied the global precedence effect in primary school children with and without developmental dyslexia, using a compound figures task with familiar (Latin) or unfamiliar (Hebrew) letters. The two components of the global precedence effect were considered separately: global advantage (faster processing of global than local letters) and asymmetric interference (global distracters interfere with local targets but not vice versa). Both groups of children showed a global advantage with familiar as well as with unfamiliar letters. Children without developmental dyslexia showed asymmetric interference on familiar letters, but not on unfamiliar ones. Children with developmental dyslexia showed no asymmetric interference, neither for familiar letters nor for unfamiliar ones. The results distinguish between alternative hypothesis regarding the roles of familiarity and visual processing strategies in the compound figures task. Consequences for understanding literacy acquisition and developmental dyslexia are discussed.
Keywords: Child development; Learning difficulties; Letter recognition; Meaningfulness; Visual information processing.
Copyright © 2018 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
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