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Individual differences and the transposed letter effect during reading

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posted on 2024-03-21, 12:45 authored by Charlotte E Lee, Ascensión Pagán, Hayward J Godwin, Denis Drieghe
When a preview contains substituted letters (SL; markey) word identification is more disrupted for a target word (monkey), compared to when the preview contains transposed letters (TL; mnokey). The transposed letter effect demonstrates that letter positions are encoded more flexibly than letter identities, and is a robust finding in adults. However, letter position encoding has been shown to gradually become more flexible as reading skills develop. It is unclear whether letter position encoding flexibility reaches maturation in skilled adult readers, or whether some differences in the magnitude of the TL effect remain in relation to individual differences in cognitive skills. We examined 100 skilled adult readers who read sentences containing a correct, TL or SL preview. Previews were replaced by the correct target word when the reader’s gaze triggered an invisible boundary. Cognitive skills were assessed and grouped based on overlapping variance via Principal Components Analysis (PCA) and subsequently used to predict eye movement measures for each condition. Consistent with previous literature, adult readers were found to generally encode letter position more flexibly than letter identity. Very few differences were found in the magnitude of TL effects between adults based on individual differences in cognitive skills. The flexibility of letter position encoding appears to reach maturation (or near maturation) in skilled adult readers.

Funding

The South Coast ESRC Doctoral Training Partnership

Economic and Social Research Council

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History

Citation

Lee CE, Pagán A, Godwin HJ, Drieghe D (2024) Individual differences and the transposed letter effect during reading. PLoS ONE 19(2): e0298351. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0298351

Author affiliation

College of Life Sciences College of Life Sciences/Psychology & Vision Sciences

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

PLOS ONE

Volume

19

Issue

2

Pagination

e0298351 - e0298351

Publisher

Public Library of Science (PLoS)

eissn

1932-6203

Acceptance date

2024-01-22

Copyright date

2024

Available date

2024-03-21

Editors

Comesaña Vila M

Language

en

Deposited by

Dr Ascensión Pagán

Deposit date

2024-02-29

Data Access Statement

All data and materials are available online at: https://osf.io/b2rdm/

Rights Retention Statement

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