Version 2 2021-01-19, 09:23Version 2 2021-01-19, 09:23
Version 1 2020-07-16, 15:54Version 1 2020-07-16, 15:54
journal contribution
posted on 2021-01-01, 00:33authored bySainan Zhao, Lin Li, Min Cbang, Jingxin Wang, Kevin Paterson
Older adults are thought to compensate for slower lexical processing by making greater use of contextual knowledge, relative to young adults, to predict words in sentences. Accordingly, compared to young adults, older adults should produce larger contextual predictability effects in reading times and skipping rates for words. Empirical support for this account is nevertheless scarce. Perhaps the clearest evidence to date comes from a recent Chinese study showing larger word predictability effects for older adults in reading times but not skipping rates for two-character words (Zhao et al., 2019). However, one possibility is that the absence of a word-skipping effect in this experiment was due to the older readers skipping words infrequently because of difficulty processing two-character words parafoveally. We therefore took a further look at this issue, using one-character target words to boost word-skipping. Young (18-30 years) and older (65+ years) adults read sentences containing a target word that was either highly predictable or less predictable from the prior sentence context. Our results replicate the finding that older adults produce larger word predictability effects in reading times but not word-skipping, despite high skipping rates. We discuss these findings in relation to ageing effects on reading indifferent writing systems.
History
Citation
The Quarterly journal of experimental psychology, 2020, Volume: 74 issue: 1, page(s): 68-76
Author affiliation
Department of Neuroscience, Psychology and Behaviour, College of Life Sciences