The two volumes serve as a state-of-the-art, comprehensive overview of the field. They are essential reading for researchers of visual word recognition, and students on undergraduate and postgraduate courses in cognition and cognitive psychology, specifically the psychology of language and reading. They will also be of use to those working in education and speech-language therapy.
Word recognition is the component of reading which involves the identification of individual words. Together the two volumes of Visual Word Recognition offer a state-of-the-art overview of contemporary research from leading figures in the field.
This second volume examines how research on word recognition has been linked to the study of concepts and meaning, such as how morphemes affect word recognition, how the meaning of words affects their processing and the effect of priming on the processing of words.
The book also discusses eye-movement research, the reading of whole sentences and passages, how bilinguals recognize words in different languages, individual differences in visual word recognition, and the development of visual word recognition difficulties in developmental dyslexia.
The two volumes serve as a state-of-the-art, comprehensive overview of the field. They are essential reading for researchers of visual word recognition, and students on undergraduate and postgraduate courses in cognition and cognitive psychology, specifically the psychology of language and reading. They will also be of use to those working in education and speech-language therapy.
J.S Adelman Introduction, L.B.Feldman, K. Weber, Morphological
processing: A comparsion of graded and categorical accounts, P.M. Pexman,
Meaning-Based Influences on Visual Word Recognition, L. L. Jones, Z. Estes
Lexical Priming: Associative, semantic, and thematic influences on word
recognition, E. R. Schotter, K. Rayner, Eye Movements and Word Recognition
During Reading, J. Heister, K. Würzner, R. Kliegl, Analysing Large Datasets
of Eye Movements During Reading, A. I. Schwartz, J. G. Van Hell, Bilingual
visual word recognition in sentence context, S. Andrews, Individual
differences in skilled visual word recognition and reading: The role of
lexical quality, N. A. McClung, C. R. O'Donnell, A. E. Cunningham,
Orthographic Learning and the Development of Visual Word Recognition, Y.
Ahmed, R. K. Wagner, P. T. Kantor, How Visual Word Recognition is Affected by
Developmental Dyslexia, J. F. Stein, Biological-Level Account of
Developmental Dyslexia
James S. Adelman first became involved in visual word recognition research whilst reading for a degree in Mathematics and Psychology at the University of Liverpool. From there, he went on to complete a PhD and various externally funded research projects at the University of Warwick, where he has been an Assistant Professor since 2010.