Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
6264058 Brain Research 2012 14 Pages PDF
Abstract

In groups of 7-year-olds and 11-year-olds, event-related potentials (ERPs) were recorded to briefly presented, masked letter strings that included real word (DARK/PARK), pronounceable pseudoword (DARL/PARL), unpronounceable nonword (RDKA/RPKA), and letter-in-xs (DXXX, PXXX) stimuli in a variant of the Reicher-Wheeler paradigm. Behaviorally, participants decided which of two letters occurred at a given position in each string (here, forced-choice alternatives D and P). Both groups showed evidence of behavioral word (more accurate choices for letters in words than in baseline nonwords or letter-in-xs) and pseudoword (more accurate choices for letters in pseudowords than in baseline nonwords or letter-in-xs) superiority effects. Electrophysiologically, 11-year-olds evidenced superiority effects on P150 and N400 peak amplitude, while 7-year-olds showed effects only on N400 amplitude. These findings suggest that the mechanisms underlying the observed behavioral superiority effects may be lexical in younger children but both sublexical and lexical in older children. These results are consistent with a lengthy developmental time course for automatic sublexical orthographic specialization, extending beyond the age of 11.

► Used an ERP variant of the Reicher-Wheeler paradigm with 7-year-olds and 11-year-olds. ► Both 7- and 11-year-olds showed behavioral word and pseudoword superiority effects. ► 7-year-olds showed ERP superiority effects only on N400 amplitude. ► 11-year-olds showed ERP superiority effects on P150 and N400 amplitude. ► Lengthy developmental time course for neural automatic orthographic processing.

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