This article by a team led by Keith Rayner, one of the world's leading researchers in this field, should be read by all seriously involved in working with dyslexic adults and anyone interested in how we read.
As in most research into reading, this looks at the
reading performance of effective ‘fluent readers’. But it again reinforces the
need for maximal parafoveal processing. Being able to process visually and
hence phonologically, the characters in the direction you are reading.
The article refers to ‘fast’ and ‘slow’ readers.
The fast
readers (reading over 258 wpm, with an average reading rate of 337 wpm with
normally spaced fonts)
The slow readers (reading
less than 258 wpm, with an average reading rate of 207 wpm with normally spaced
fonts).
These must have been silent
reading speeds, with I believe, most of the slow reading groups sub vocalising.
The slow reading group were
unable to use of visual data more than one extra word in the direction of
reading. Whereas the fast reading group were able to make use of 2, 3 or more
words ahead.
Read the article. The evidence
is very supportive of the model being developed here, which is mainly
based on working for adults reading at
an average speed of 134 words per minute, and very rarely over 160 words
per minute. (See the previous post).
Think again about of the relevance of particular numbers.
For the slow readers, when
they could only see the word they were reading,with no parafoveal visual information
their mean reading speed dropped to that 160wpm again.
For years, I used to have
the number written large the wall where I was working. It always intrigued
me. So......
.......160 wpm is the mean reading
speed if you can only visually/phonologically process one word at a time.
The majority of dyslexic
adults, typically cannot process a whole word in one fixation. Research referred to in previous postssuggests this is likely to be associate to some extent with lack of phonological cues from parafoveal processing.
At least with the way text is usually presented.
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