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Cognitive antecedents of early reading ability: A test of the modularity hypothesis

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ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/S0022-0965(03)00106-1

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comprehension; Hebrew; modularity; prediction; reading; specificity; word recognition

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This study tested the hypothesis that the cognitive antecedents of word recognition are uniquely domain-specific and unrelated to higher-order domain-general cognitive abilities. This hypothesis was evaluated in a longitudinal study of 349 Hebrew-speaking children (mean age: 6.0 years) who were tested on a battery of domain-specific (phonological awareness, phonological memory, visual-orthographic processing, and early literacy) and domain-general tasks (general intelligence, higher-order reasoning, and language) at the end of kindergarten. Word recognition and reading comprehension were assessed at the end of Grade 1. Whereas the kindergarten domain-specific measures accounted for significant and substantial variance in word recognition (33%), the domain-general measures explained only 5% of the variance. Furthermore, the contribution of domain-specific variables to word recognition remained unaltered even after controlling for all domain-general and higher-order language tasks. Reading comprehension, in contrast, was predicted by both print-specific skills (51%,) and domain-general abilities (44%). These findings strongly support the notion of word recognition modularity in a well-encapsulated orthography. (C) 2003 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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