Adults with poor reading skills, older adults, and college students: The meanings they understand during reading using a diffusion model analysis

Publication date: October 2018Source: Journal of Memory and Language, Volume 102Author(s): Gail McKoon, Roger RatcliffAbstractWhen a word is read in a text, the aspects of its meanings that are encoded should be those relevant to the text and not those that are irrelevant. We tested whether older adults, college students, and adults with poor literacy skills accomplish contextually relevant encoding. Participants read short stories, which were followed by true/false test sentences. Among these were sentences that matched the relevant meaning of a word in a story and sentences that matched a different meaning. We measured the speed and accuracy of responses to the test sentences and used a decision model to separate the information that a reader encodes from the reader’s speed/accuracy tradeoff settings. We found that all three groups encoded meanings as contextually relevant. The findings illustrate how a decision-making model combined with tests of particular comprehension processes can lead to further understanding of reading skills.
Source: Journal of Memory and Language - Category: Speech-Language Pathology Source Type: research