Full Description
Reading is one of the most sophisticated demonstrations of human pattern recognition and symbolic processing skill. Skilled readers effortlessly comprehend written text at rates of at least 300 words per minute, despite the complex interactions between perceptual, cognitive and memory processes required for effective comprehension. Understanding how we achieve this remarkable feat has been a focus of investigation since the birth of experimental psychology.
Over the last two decades, visual word recognition has been at the forefront of developments in cognitive science. This book brings together many of the most influential contributors to these developments to reflect on current issues in the cognitive science of lexical processing and the methods required for further progress. The first section focuses on computational models. Written words provide a fertile context for large-scale modeling and the domain of lexical retrieval has become a test-bed for evaluating competing theoretical frameworks. The later sections draw upon cognitive psychology, linguistics, philosophy, computer science and neuroscience to elaborate critical theoretical issues and to develop novel research tools.
From Inkmarks to Ideas provides advanced students and researchers with a comprehensive overview of the critical theoretical and empirical controversies in current research on the cognitive science of lexical processing and reading.
Contents
S. Andrews, Preface. Part I - Theories of lexical retrieval: Computational models and mechanisms. K. Rastle, M. Coltheart, Is there serial processing in the reading system; and are there local representations? M.S. Seidenberg, D.C. Plaut, Progress in understanding word reading: Data fitting versus theory building. C.T. Kello, Considering the junction model of lexical processing. M. Taft, A localist-cum-distributed (LCD) framework for lexical processing. K.I. Forster, Five challenges for activation models. K. Rayner, E.D. Reichle, A. Pollatsek, Cognitive processes in reading: The E-Z Reader model of eye movement control. Part II - Models, methods measures: Converging approaches to investigating lexical processing. A. Castles, K. Nation, How does orthographic learning happen? C.J. Davis, Orthographic input coding: A review of behavioural evidence and current models. C. Davis, J. Kim, Changing circumstance: How flexible is lexical access? D.A. Balota, M.J. Yap, Attentional control and flexible lexical processing: Explorations of the magic moment of word recognition. G. Libben, Reading complex morphological structures. A. Pollatsek, J. Hyönä, Processing of morphemically complex words in context: What can be learned from eye movements. K. Patterson, M.C. MacDonald, Sweet nothings: Narrative speech in semantic dementia. S. Andrews, All about words: A lexicalist perspective on reading.