“…We found converging evidence that our skilled, silent readers seemingly "heard" prosodic focus. Our findings supplement the compelling evidence for the role of segmental phonology in skilled reading (Abramson & Goldinger, 1997 ;Acheson & MacDonald, 2009 ;Ashby & Clifton, 2005 ;Ashby et al, 2006 ;Gross et al, 2000 ;Hanson et al, 1991 ;Lukatela et al, 2004 ;McCutchen et al, 1991 ;Treiman, 1994 ;Treiman et al, 1995 ). Our findings complement recent evidence that silent readers extract suprasegmental prosodic features, such as lexical stress and metrical stress, when computing the relations between print and speech (Breen & Clifton, 2011 ), for when these readers encountered an inconsistency between the predicted meter and the required stress of a homograph, they suffered longer fixation times (Breen & Clifton, 2011 ).…”