英文摘要 |
This study addresses the issue as to whether visual or phonological processing is the main cognitive component in reading acquisition for Chinese native speakers. We employed cognitive tasks that focused on phoneme deletion, phoneme blending, a visual discrimination task, and visual memory. By using a design that employing both reading-age and physical-age as controls, we tried to understand which kinds of task discriminate between good and poor readers, and further, which task might be primarily a cause rather than an effect of reading acquisition. We found that, after statistically controlling for IQ, phoneme blending in pseudo characters was significantly greater in the reading-age control group than in the poor reader group. However, other tasks, including those concerned with phoneme deletion, visual discrimination and visual memory, did not show this pattern. We concluded that visual processing is not an effective cognitive component in Chinese reading acquisition, and that phoneme blending seems to be a causal factor. |