Kessler, Brett. (In press). Statistical learning of conditional orthographic correspondences. Writing Systems Research.
This is a preprint of an article that has been accepted for publication in the Writing Systems Research. Publication licence is held by Oxford University Press. This material may not be copied or reposted without explicit permission from Oxford Journals.
The English writing system deviates widely from the alphabetic ideal of uniform one-to-one correspondence between graphemes and phonemes, but its inconsistency is greatly reduced when conditional sound–spelling rules are applied. When reading or writing one part of a word, children and adults evinced knowledge of rules sensitive to the identity of other letters or phonemes, even those appearing much later in the word. Adults also showed sensitivity to the distinction between the basic and Romance subsystems of English (Albrow‘s Systems 1 and 2). Children as young as 6 applied conditional rules they were not taught, indicating implicit statistical learning of patterns observed in text. But learning is imperfect, and even adults did not match the frequency with which the patterns are found in English words.
Kessler, B. (in press). Statistical learning of conditional orthographic correspondences. Writing Systems Research.
Last change 2009-07-21T11:08:35-0500