New publication in Journal of Experimental Child Psychology

The involvement of long-term serial-order memory in reading development: A longitudinal study

Recent findings suggest that Hebb repetition learning—a paradigmatic example of long-term serial-order learning—is impaired in adults with dyslexia. The current study further investigated the link between serial-order learning and reading using a longitudinal developmental design. With this aim, verbal and visual Hebb repetition learning performance and reading skills were assessed in 96 Dutch-speaking children who we followed from first through second grade of primary school. We observed a positive association between order learning capacities and reading ability as well as weaker Hebb learning performance in early readers with poor reading skills even at the onset of reading instruction. Hebb learning further predicted individual differences in later (nonword) reading skills. Finally, Hebb learning was shown to explain a significant part of the variance in reading performance above and beyond phonological awareness. These findings highlight the role of serial-order memory in reading ability.

Bogaerts, L., Szmalec, A., De Maeyer, M., Page, M.P.A., & Duyck, W. (in press). The involvement of long-term serial-order memory in reading development: A longitudinal study. Journal of Experimental Child Psychology. PDF available here

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