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Purpose: How does lexical decision behavior vary in students with the same grade level (all students were in their first year of middle-school), but different levels of reading fluency? Here, we tested a prediction of the dual-route model: as fluency increases, variations in the results may reflect a decreasing reliance on decoding and an increasing reliance on the lexical route.
Method: 1,501 French 6 graders passed a one-minute speeded reading-aloud task evaluating fluency, and a ten-minute computerized lexical decision task evaluating the impact of lexicality, length, word frequency and pseudoword type.
Results: As predicted, the word length effect varied dramatically with reading fluency, with the least fluent students showing a length effect even for frequent words. The frequency effect also varied, but solely in proportion to overall reading speed, suggesting that frequency affects the decision stage similarly in all readers, while length disproportionately impacts poor readers. Response times and errors were also affected by pseudoword type (e.g., letter substitutions or transpositions), but these effects showed minimal variation with fluency. Overall, lexical decision variables were excellent predictors of reading fluency (r = 0.62).
Conclusion: Our results highlight the variability in middle-school reading ability and describe how a simple lexical decision task can be used to assess students' mental lexicon (vocabulary) and the automatization of reading skills.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1162/opmi_a_00140 | DOI Listing |
Cogn Process
September 2025
Department of Modern Languages, Literatures, and Cultures, University of Bologna, Via Cartoleria, 5, Bologna, Italy.
Concrete concepts (banana) are processed faster and more accurately than abstract ones (belief). This phenomenon, supported by empirical studies, is known as the concreteness effect. However, recent research indicates that controlling certain psycholinguistic variables can mitigate or reverse this effect.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBMC Nurs
September 2025
Department of Caring Sciences, Faculty of Health and Occupational Studies, University of Gävle, Gävle, SE-801 76, Sweden.
Background: Higher-order thinking is a central objective in nursing education, particularly within thesis courses where students are expected to demonstrate analytical reasoning and scholarly autonomy.
Aim: The aim of this study is to examine the structure, cognitive complexity, and knowledge domain classification of learning outcomes in degree project courses within Swedish undergraduate nursing education.
Methods: This national cross-sectional study examined the cognitive structure of 236 intended learning outcomes derived from 23 universities and university colleagues offering undergraduate nursing thesis courses across all Swedish higher education institutions (N = 25).
Brain Res
August 2025
Department of Cognitive Science, Budapest University of Technology and Economics, Hungary; MTA-BME Momentum Language Acquisition Research Group, Hungarian Research Network (HUN-REN), Hungary. Electronic address:
Age and language experience both shape the speed of visual word recognition for children and adults. There is a considerable debate in the literature regarding whether these effects are primarily facilitating or impeding and whether the influences of age and language experience can be distinct and delineated. In order to address these questions, we collected data from Hungarian participants, analyzing data from 80 children (ages 9-17) and 387 adults (ages 18-90), on 250 words in an online visual lexical decision task.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBehav Sci (Basel)
August 2025
Department of Communication Sciences and Disorders, University of Iowa, Iowa City, IA 52242, USA.
Filled pauses are thought to be reflections of linguistic processes (e.g., lexical retrieval, speech planning and execution).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Exp Psychol Hum Percept Perform
August 2025
School of Psychology and Neuroscience, University of Glasgow.
The pseudohomophone (PH) effect refers to an established finding whereby in a visual lexical decision task, nonword letter strings that are pronounced like real words (e.g., WAWK) are harder to reject than nonword strings that are not pronounced like real words (e.
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