“…Artificial orthographies also enable controlling for exposure and experience of each participant that is never truly controlled for in studies using naturally occurring writing systems, but could potentially affect item-specific individual differences (Share, 1995). We have identified 13 published studies, in addition to ongoing work in our lab (Hirshorn et al, 2012; Hirshorn et al, 2013; Moore, Durisko, Chen, et al, 2013), that have used artificial orthographies (Bitan & Booth, 2012; Bitan & Karni, 2003, 2004; Bitan, Manor, Morocz, & Karni, 2005; Gleitman & Rozin, 1973; Hart & Perfetti, 2008; Maurer, Blau, Yoncheva, & McCandliss, 2010; Mei et al, 2012; Moore, Brendel, & Fiez, 2014; Moore, Durisko, Perfetti, & Fiez, 2013; Sebesta, 1964; Taylor, Plunkett, & Nation, 2011; Yoncheva, Blau, Maurer, & McCandliss, 2010). They cover topics such as the acquisition of visual expertise (Maurer et al, 2010) or visual/perceptual role in neural processing of reading (Moore, Durisko, Chen, et al, 2013; Moore, Durisko, Perfetti, et al, 2013), effect of letter instruction on word identification (Bitan & Booth, 2012; Bitan & Karni, 2003, 2004; Bitan et al, 2005), phonological interference in lexical representations (Hart & Perfetti, 2008), orthographic consistency (Sebesta, 1964; Taylor et al, 2011), and differences in learning and the neural representations of reading as a factor of grain size (Gleitman & Rozin, 1973; Hirshorn et al, 2013; Mei et al, 2012; Moore et al, 2014; Yoncheva et al, 2010).…”