Two Routes or One in Reading Aloud
Two
Routes or One in Reading Aloud: A Connectionist Dual-Process
Model
Author(s)
Marco Zorzi, George Houghton and Brian Butterworth
Journal Reference:(s)
Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and
Performance1998, Vol 24, No. 4, 1131-1161
Abstract:(s)
A connectionist study of word reading is described that
emphasizes the computational demands of the spelling-sound mapping in
determining the properties of the reading system. It is shown that the
phonological assembly process can be implemented by a two-layer
network, which easily extracts the regularities in the spelling-sound
mapping for English from training data containing many exception words.
It is argued that productive knowledge about spelling-sound
relationships is more easily acquired and used if it is separated from
case-specific knowledge of the pronunciation of known words. It is then
shown how the interaction of assembled and retrieved phonologies can
account for the combined effects of frequency and
regularity-consistency and for the reading performance of dyslexic
patients. It is concluded that the organization of the reading system
reflects the demands of the task and that the pronunciations of
nonwords and exception words are computed by different processes.
# of Citations - 116
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