Understanding how we read is a fundamental question for psychology, with critical implications for education. Studies of word reading tend to focus on the mappings between the written and spoken forms of words. In this paper, we review evidence from developmental, neuroimaging, neuropsychological, and computational studies that show that knowledge of word meanings is inextricably involved in word reading. Consequently, models of reading must better specify the role of meaning in skilled reading and its acquisition. Further, our review paves the way for educationally realistic research to confirm whether explicit teaching of oral vocabulary improves word reading.Key words: reading, learning, orthography, phonology, semantics
WORD MEANING AND READING / 4 HOW WORD MEANING INFLUENCES WORD READINGReading is fundamental to operating in modern society. For literate adults, reading is immediate, automatic, and efficient. Despite this, reading is not an innate capability but is parasitic upon an earlier acquired spoken language system that includes information about what words sound like (phonology) and what they mean (semantics). The ultimate goal of learning to read is to comprehend texts, for which knowledge of word meanings is essential.The ability to recognise and read aloud words (encompassed by the term word reading throughout this review) is a pre-requisite for reading comprehension. Research has focused on the orthography (print) to phonology connections that underpin word reading. However, the role of word meanings in word reading is less well understood and is thus the focus of this review. As suggested by Balota (1990), seminal findings from the adult behavioural literature now demonstrate that word reading efficiency is significantly influenced by semantic variables, over and above frequency and orthographic factors (Cortese & Schock, 2013). Building on this, we review recent evidence from a number of research traditions, which show conclusively that word reading in alphabetic languages is influenced by knowledge of semantics.Cognitive models of reading all include orthographic, phonological, and semantic representations of words, as well as the mappings between them. In computational models based on a classical dual-route approach ( Figure 1A; Coltheart, Rastle, Perry, Langdon, & Ziegler, 2001;Perry, Ziegler, & Zorzi, 2007), activation of a word's semantics is not necessary for recognising or reading it aloud. In contrast, the triangle modelling tradition ( Figure 1B; Harm & Seidenberg, 2004;Monaghan & Ellis, 2010;Plaut, McClelland, Seidenberg, & Patterson, 1996;Woollams, Lambon Ralph, Plaut, & Patterson, 2007) posits that semantic WORD MEANING AND READING / 5 information directly affects the learning and processing of mappings between the written and spoken forms of words. More specifically, it predicts that meaning particularly aids print-to-sound mapping when this process is difficult (as in words with exceptional spellings, or for poorer readers), and also that skilled reading involves increased...