Dual Task Costs of Oral Reading for Young versus Older Adults

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Issue Date
2014-02Author
Kemper, Susan
Bontempo, Daniel E.
Schmalzried, RaLynn Cheri
McKedy, Whitney
Tagliaferri, Bruno
Kieweg, Douglas
Publisher
Springer Verlag
Type
Article
Article Version
Scholarly/refereed, author accepted manuscript
Rights
© Springer Science+Business Media New York 2013
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
A digital pursuit rotor was used to monitor oral reading costs by time-locking tracking performance to the auditory wave form produced as young and older adults were reading out short paragraphs. Multilevel modeling was used to determine how paragraph-level predictors of length, grammatical complexity, and readability and person-level predictors such as speaker age or working memory capacity predicted reading and tracking performance. In addition, sentence-by-sentence variation in tracking performance was examined during the production of individual sentences and during the pauses before upcoming sentences. The results suggest that dual tasking has a greater impact on older adults’ reading comprehension and tracking performance. At the level of individual sentences, young and older adults adopt different strategies to deal with grammatically complex and propositionally dense sentences.
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Citation
Kemper, S., Bontempo, D., Schmalzried, R., McKedy, W., Tagliaferri, B., & Kieweg, D. (2014). Dual Task Costs of Oral Reading for Young versus Older Adults. Journal of Psycholinguistic Research, 43(1), 59–80. http://doi.org/10.1007/s10936-013-9240-z
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