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Ashby, Jane; Dix, Heather; Bontrager, Morgan; Dey, Rajarshi; Archer, Ana – School Psychology Review, 2013
Although phonemic awareness is a known predictor of early decoding and word recognition, less is known about relationships between phonemic awareness and text reading fluency. This longitudinal study is the first to investigate this relationship by measuring eye movements during picture matching tasks and during silent sentence reading. Time spent…
Descriptors: Phonemic Awareness, Eye Movements, Reading Fluency, Longitudinal Studies
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Ashby, Jane; Martin, Andrea E. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2008
Two experiments examined the nature of the phonological representations used during visual word recognition. We tested whether a minimality constraint (R. Frost, 1998) limits the complexity of early representations to a simple string of phonemes. Alternatively, readers might activate elaborated representations that include prosodic syllable…
Descriptors: Word Recognition, Suprasegmentals, Syllables, Phonemes
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Ashby, Jane – Journal of Research in Reading, 2006
Recent eye movement experiments offer preliminary evidence that skilled readers activate word-level prosodic information when silently reading sentences. This paper reviews the role of eye movements during reading as well as the preliminary evidence for prosodic processing. A new experiment examines whether prosodic processing differs for high and…
Descriptors: Syllables, Silent Reading, Sentences, Eye Movements
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Ashby, Jane; Treiman, Rebecca; Kessler, Brett; Rayner, Keith – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2006
Two eye movement experiments examined whether skilled readers include vowels in the early phonological representations used in word recognition during silent reading. Target words were presented in sentences preceded by parafoveal previews in which the vowel phoneme was concordant or discordant with the vowel phoneme in the target word. In…
Descriptors: Vowels, Silent Reading, Sentence Structure, Eye Movements