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Original Article

Visual‐attentional span and lexical ­decision in skilled adult readers

Virginia M. Holmes

Corresponding Author

Psychological Sciences, University of Melbourne, , Australia

Address for correspondence: Virginia M. Holmes, Psychological Sciences, University of Melbourne, Parkville, Victoria 3010, Australia. E‐mail:

vmholmes@unimelb.edu.au

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Georgia Dawson

Psychological Sciences, University of Melbourne, , Australia

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First published: 21 September 2012

Abstract

The goal of the study was to examine the association between visual‐attentional span and lexical decision in skilled adult readers. In the span tasks, an array of letters was presented briefly and recognition or production of a single cued letter (partial span) or production of all letters (whole span) was required. Independently of letter recognition and phoneme awareness, width of partial recognition span predicted substantial variance only in detection of letter misorderings in words, while partial span efficiency made small contributions to decisions on regular words and pseudowords, but not strange words. With a production format and the inclusion of short‐term phonological memory, neither partial‐span nor whole‐span measures contributed positive independent variance to word and nonword decisions. The results provide meagre support for the idea that skilled adult readers with a wide visual‐attentional span might process words more effectively than those with a narrow span during lexical decision.