1st Edition
Toward a Psychology of Reading The Proceedings of the CUNY Conferences
Preface. 1. The Structure and Acquisition of Reading I: Relations between Orthographies and the Structure of Language Lila R. Gleitman and Paul Rozin 2. The Structure and Acquisition of Reading II: The Reading Process and the Acquisition of the Alphabetic Principle Paul Rozin and Lila R. Gleitman 3. Visual Pattern in Fluent Word Identification Lee Brooks 4. Perceptual Processes in Reading: The Perceptual Spans Keith Rayner and George W. McConkie 5. Phonetic Segmentation and Recoding in the Beginning Reader Isabelle Y. Liberman, Donald Shankweiler, Alvin M. Liberman, Carol Fowler and F. William Fischer 6. Reading Comprehension as a Function of Text Structure Walter Kintsch 7. Building Perceptual and Cognitive Strategies into a Reading Curriculum Joanna Williams 8. Assessment of Independent Reading Skills: Basic Research and Practical Applications Robert C. Calfee. Author Index. Subject Index.
Biography
Arthur S. Reber was best known for his scientific research on unconscious learning, particularly that using an “artificial grammar” paradigm to examine how people acquire knowledge about the structure of a set of stimuli with little explicit awareness. His early work moved the field forward in important ways, eventually becoming widely adopted and generating tremendous interest in the cognitive unconscious. His later research ranged fearlessly over topics as diverse as implicit learning and tacit knowledge, the psychology of risk and gambling, the evolutionary origins of consciousness, and candidate biochemical mechanisms for the emergence of sentience.
Don L. Scarborough attended Swarthmore College and the University of Pennsylvania, where he studied with Saul Sternberg and earned a Ph.D. in Cognitive Psychology in 1968. He was a Professor of Psychology at Brooklyn College of the City University of New York until his retirement in 2001, and was also on the faculty of the Computer Science department after receiving a degree in that field in 1985. Professor Scarborough’s primary research interests were word recognition processes and the perception of music.






