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Paired-Associate Learning Ability Accounts for Unique Variance in Orthographic Learning
29
Citations
41
References
2016
Year
Educational PsychologyLanguage DevelopmentEducationLearning StyleCognitionPsycholinguisticsPhonologyLanguage LearningSecond Language AcquisitionChild LanguageLanguage AcquisitionCognitive DevelopmentLanguage StudiesUnique VarianceAlphabet KnowledgeLearning ProblemCognitive ScienceLearning SciencesPhonological AwarenessPaired-associate Learning AbilityPaired-associate LearningLearning TheoryPhonicsLanguage ComprehensionForeign Language AcquisitionLinguistics
Paired-associate learning is a dynamic measure of the ability to form new links between two items. This study aimed to investigate whether paired-associate learning ability is associated with success in orthographic learning, and if so, whether it accounts for unique variance beyond phonological decoding ability and orthographic knowledge. A group of 63 children ages 8–10 completed an orthographic learning task and three types of paired-associate learning task: visual–visual, visual–verbal, and verbal–verbal. The results showed that both visual–verbal and verbal–verbal (but not visual–visual) paired-associate learning ability were associated with success in learning the spellings of novel words. Moreover, hierarchical regression analyses showed that visual–verbal paired-associate learning predicted orthographic learning even after phonological decoding skill and existing orthographic knowledge had been accounted for. We propose that paired-associate learning ability may be one of the underlying mechanisms of orthographic learning, facilitating the connection between the phonology and orthographic representation of a word.
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