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Full-Text Articles in Phonetics and Phonology
Processing Differences In Reading Alliteration And Rhyme: An Eye-Movement Study, Keiko Bridwell
Processing Differences In Reading Alliteration And Rhyme: An Eye-Movement Study, Keiko Bridwell
Senior Theses
In studies of silent reading, it is well-attested that the phonological content of a word, and not only its visual shape, contributes to the reading process. One of the most widely-observed phenomena in this field is the “tongue twister effect”: the tendency for words with repeated initial phonemes to be read more slowly and comprehended more poorly than words without phonological repetition. This effect has been welldocumented over decades of research; however, it has overwhelmingly dealt with wordinitial overlap, or alliteration. Very few studies have looked at the impact that word-final overlap, or rhyme, might have on reading. In the …