Publication | Closed Access
Learning to Spell from Reading: General Knowledge about Spelling Patterns Influences Memory for Specific Words
44
Citations
32
References
2013
Year
Second Language LearningMultilingualismSemantic ProcessingPsycholinguisticsCognitionHuman MemoryPhonologyLanguage LearningSocial SciencesApplied LinguisticsSecond Language AcquisitionReading ComprehensionLanguage AcquisitionMemoryReadingSpecific WordsLanguage StudiesLegal DoubletsSemantic MemoryCognitive ScienceCommon DoubletsOrthographyMnemonicAssociative Memory (Psychology)General KnowledgeLanguage ComprehensionLinguisticsTransposition Errors
Adults often learn to spell words during the course of reading for meaning, without intending to do so. We used an incidental learning task in order to study this process. Spellings that contained double n, r and t which are common doublets in French, were learned more readily by French university students than spellings that contained less common but still legal doublets. When recalling or recognizing the latter, the students sometimes made transposition errors, doubling a consonant that often doubles in French rather than the consonant that was originally doubled (e.g., tiddunar recalled as tidunnar). The results, found in three experiments using different nonwords and different types of instructions, show that people use general knowledge about the graphotactic patterns of their writing system together with word-specific knowledge to reconstruct spellings that they learn from reading. These processes contribute to failures and successes in memory for spellings, as in other domains.
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