The proposed research aims to identify sources of reading-related sentence comprehension difficulties that are most subject to individual differences, and to study their cognitive and neural underpinnings. The novelty of this project is to bring together the knowledge base on reading differences and advanced techniques for studying on-line sentence processing, and to target a largely neglected population in their late teens and early twenties who represent a wide range of reading abilities. Earlier work has shown that deficient phonological processing skills lead to slow or inaccurate recognition of the individual words, which is the hallmark of reading disability. Behavioral studies and supporting functional neuroimaging studies by the Haskins group have contributed toward understanding the cognitive and neural bases of word reading and their dysfunction in reading-disabled individuals. We hypothesize that insufficient decoding skill at the word level creates a bottleneck that prevents working memory from being used efficiently to support integrative processes in reading phrases and sentences. Alternatively, reading difficulties may stem from a learning deficit that broadly impairs the learning and retention of linguistic sequences. Predictions generated by each hypothesis will be tested in five coordinated experiments that employ a three-pronged methodology: 1) eye movement recording that tracks on-line sentence processing; 2) event-related functional neuroimaging that reveals brain activity in word reading and sentence comprehension; and 3) computational modeling that predicts behavioral and neural patterns. The experiments will address four classes of phenomena that have been found to affect the ease or difficulty of understanding connected material: detection of anomaly, resolution of ambiguity, memory demands on complex sentences, and learning of new word sequences and set phrases (idioms). Multiple analyses will be conducted to explore relationships between reading behavior and brain activation patterns

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health & Human Development (NICHD)
Type
Research Project (R01)
Project #
1R01HD040353-01A1
Application #
6434638
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZRG1-BBBP-3 (01))
Program Officer
Lyon, Reid G
Project Start
2002-03-01
Project End
2005-02-28
Budget Start
2002-03-01
Budget End
2003-02-28
Support Year
1
Fiscal Year
2002
Total Cost
$321,738
Indirect Cost
Name
Haskins Laboratories, Inc.
Department
Type
DUNS #
060010147
City
New Haven
State
CT
Country
United States
Zip Code
06511
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Braze, David; Katz, Leonard; Magnuson, James S et al. (2016) Vocabulary does not complicate the simple view of reading. Read Writ 29:435-451
Kukona, Anuenue; Cho, Pyeong Whan; Magnuson, James S et al. (2014) Lexical interference effects in sentence processing: evidence from the visual world paradigm and self-organizing models. J Exp Psychol Learn Mem Cogn 40:326-47
Van Dyke, Julie A; Johns, Clinton L; Kukona, Anuenue (2014) Low working memory capacity is only spuriously related to poor reading comprehension. Cognition 131:373-403
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Katsika, Argyro; Braze, David; Deo, Ashwini et al. (2012) Complement Coercion: Distinguishing Between Type-Shifting and Pragmatic Inferencing. Ment Lex 7:58-76
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Kukona, Anuenue; Tabor, Whitney (2011) Impulse processing: a dynamical systems model of incremental eye movements in the visual world paradigm. Cogn Sci 35:1009-51
Kukona, Anuenue; Fang, Shin-Yi; Aicher, Karen A et al. (2011) The time course of anticipatory constraint integration. Cognition 119:23-42

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