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Adults at Low Reading Level Are Sluggish in Disengaging Spatial Attention

Overview
Publisher Springer
Specialties Psychiatry
Psychology
Date 2023 Nov 1
PMID 37907730
Authors
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Abstract

An increasing number of studies show that attentional shifting is a primary contributor during the process of learning to read. However, it remains unclear what is the relationship between attentional shifting and word-reading ability in adult readers whose reading skills have matured. More fundamentally, how attentional shifting affects individuals' reading ability remains poorly understood. To address these issues, we grouped adult readers by the level of Chinese character reading and examined the time course of attentional shifting by setting up multiple stimulus-onset asynchronies (SOAs) in the Posner cue-target paradigm. Based on the phonological mediation hypothesis, we also measured multiple abilities involving phonological processing (i.e., rapid automatic naming and phonological awareness). Results showed that compared with adults at the high reading level, adults at the low reading level showed a selective impairment of attentional disengagement. Rapid automatic naming of Chinese characters played a partially mediating role in the association between attentional shifting and word reading. These results provided evidence for the phonological mediation hypothesis, and suggest that attentional shifting affects word reading by influencing phonological processing in adult Chinese readers.

Citing Articles

Adults with reading difficulties demonstrate selective impairments in the fine neural tuning for print.

Zhuang T, Li Y, Tan Y, Wang J, Yue X, Xue L Front Neurosci. 2025; 19:1520367.

PMID: 40008301 PMC: 11850523. DOI: 10.3389/fnins.2025.1520367.

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