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Article

Episodic traces and statistical regularities: Paired associate learning in typical and dyslexic readers

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Citation

Jones MW, Kuipers JR, Nugent S, Miley A & Oppenheim G (2018) Episodic traces and statistical regularities: Paired associate learning in typical and dyslexic readers. Cognition, 177, pp. 214-225. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cognition.2018.04.010

Abstract
Learning visual-phonological associations is a key skill underlying successful reading acquisition. However, we are yet to understand the cognitive mechanisms that enable efficient learning in good readers, and those which are aberrant in individuals with developmental dyslexia. Here, we use a repeated cued-recall task to examine how typical and reading-impaired adults acquire novel associations between visual and phonological stimuli, incorporating a looking-at-nothing paradigm to probe implicit memory for target locations. Cued recall accuracy revealed that typical readers’ recall of novel phonological associates was better than dyslexic readers’ recall, and it also improved more with repetition. Eye fixation-contingent error analyses suggest that typical readers’ greater improvement from repetition reflects their more robust encoding and/or retrieval of each instance in which a given pair was presented: whereas dyslexic readers tended to recall a phonological target better when fixating its most recent location, typical readers showed this pattern more strongly when the target location was consistent across multiple trials. Thus, typical readers’ greater success in reading acquisition may derive from their better use of statistical contingencies to identify consistent stimulus features across multiple exposures. We discuss these findings in relation to the role of implicit memory in forming new visual-phonological associations as a foundational skill in reading, and areas of weakness in developmental dyslexia.

Keywords
Paired associated learning; Visual-phonological binding; Developmental dyslexia; Eye-tracking; Looking-at-nothing; Statistical learning; Episodic memory

Journal
Cognition: Volume 177

StatusPublished
Publication date31/08/2018
Publication date online27/04/2018
Date accepted by journal10/04/2018
URL
PublisherElsevier
ISSN0010-0277

People (1)

Dr Jan Rouke Kuipers

Dr Jan Rouke Kuipers

Lecturer in Psychology, Psychology

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