Question 1
Question
Average adult readers read silently/aloud at:
Answer
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250/500 - 600 WPM, respectively
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300/600 - 700 WPM, respectively
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500/650 - 750 WPM, respectively
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150/300 - 400 WPM, respectively
Question 2
Question
[blank_start]Orthography[blank_end]: the spelling of words
[blank_start]Phonology[blank_end]: the sound of words
[blank_start]Semantics[blank_end]: the meaning of words
[blank_start]Syntax[blank_end]: rules for combining words
[blank_start]Discourse processing[blank_end]: making inferences
Answer
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Orthography
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Phonology
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Semantics
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Syntax
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Discourse processing
Question 3
Question
Types of dyslexia:
[blank_start]Surface[blank_end]: intact nonword reading, but poor at reading irregular words; e.g. yacht
[blank_start]Phonological[blank_end]: intact word reading, poor at reading nonwords; e.g. jink
[blank_start]Deep[blank_end]: poor at reading nonwords, plus semantic errors in regular words; e.g. reads 'tulip' as 'rose'
Answer
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Surface
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Phonological
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Deep
Question 4
Question
Which type of dyslexia requires exclusive use of the nonlexical route?
Answer
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Acquired
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Developmental
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Surface
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Phonological
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Deep
Question 5
Question
Representations of familiar words are stored in the orthographic input lexicon describes which type of dyslexia?
Answer
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Acquired
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Developmental
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Surface
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Phonological
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Deep
Question 6
Question
A particular difficulty reading abstract & function words is representative of what type of dyslexia?
Answer
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Acquired
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Developmental
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Surface
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Deep
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Phonological
Question 7
Question
Recovering deep dyslexics often become [blank_start]phonological[blank_end] dyslexics.
Question 8
Question
You are still able to see during saccades.
Question 9
Question
Words that are not fixated on are likely to be:
Answer
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Common
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Rare
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Short
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Long
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Predictable
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Unpredictable
Question 10
Question
There is evidence of the Optical Recognition Point (ORP) in isolated words.
Question 11
Question
There is evidence that saccade programming time reflect the search for the ORP.
Question 12
Question
Reading rate is not constant.
Question 13
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[blank_start]Energetic Masking[blank_end]: distracting sounds cause the intelligibility of target words to be degraded
[blank_start]Information Masking[blank_end]: cognitive load makes speech perception harder
Answer
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Energetic Masking
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Information Masking
Question 14
Question
Energetic masking affects [blank_start]bottom-up[blank_end] processing.
Information masking affects [blank_start]top-down[blank_end] processing.
Question 15
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[blank_start]Segmentation[blank_end]: dividing the almost continuous sounds of speech into separate phonemes and words.
[blank_start]Coarticulation[blank_end]: a speaker's production of a phoneme is influenced by their production of the previous sound and by preparation of the next sound.
Answer
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Segmentation
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Coarticulation
Question 16
Question
Language is spoken at approximately how many phonemes a second?
Question 17
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[blank_start]Phoneme restoration effect[blank_end]: the finding that listeners are unaware that a phoneme has been deleted and replaced by a non-speech sound within a sentence
[blank_start]Ganong effect[blank_end]: the finding that perception of an ambiguous phoneme is biased towards a sound that produces a sound rather than a non-word
[blank_start]Uniqueness point[blank_end]: when the available perceptual information is consistent with only one word (during spoken word recognition).