# Low literacy skills in adults can be largely explained by basic linguistic and domain-general predictors

**Authors:** Réka Vágvölgyi, Moritz Sahlender, Hannes Schröter, Benjamin Nagengast, Thomas Dresler, Josef Schrader, Hans-Christoph Nuerk

PMC · DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2024.1422896 · Frontiers in Psychology · 2024-09-04

## TL;DR

This study finds that low literacy skills in adults are mostly due to basic language abilities and general cognitive factors like working memory.

## Contribution

The study identifies key predictors of poor complex text reading in adults using a transparent orthography.

## Key findings

- Linguistic factors like word reading and oral comprehension predict complex text reading deficits.
- Working memory and age also significantly influence text comprehension performance.
- The model explains 73% of the variance in complex text reading performance.

## Abstract

Despite having sufficient formal education, a large group of people cannot complete everyday tasks like reading, writing, or making basic calculations. Regarding reading, millions of people are not able to understand more complex texts despite the ability to read simple words or sentences; they have low literacy skills. Even though this problem has been known for decades, the causes and predictors of their poor reading comprehension skills are not fully explored. Socioeconomic, sociodemographic, and reading-related (i.e., linguistic) factors, especially of English-speaking participants and thus users of an opaque orthography, were often assessed. The goal of this study was to examine which linguistic, domain-general, or numerical factors predict substandard complex text reading as the core symptom of low literacy skills in adulthood.

To this end, we assessed a group of German-speaking participants—users of a transparent orthography—who are at risk for complex text reading deficits.

The results indicated that linguistic variables (reduced word/pseudoword reading, weaker oral semantic and grammatical comprehension), working memory, and age predicted lower performance in text comprehension. This model explained 73% of the total variance, indicating that most of the deficits in complex text reading can be explained by a group of basic underlying linguistic and domain-general factors.

We conclude that interventions for adults with low literacy skills and others at risk for complex text reading deficits should address word/pseudoword reading and focus on both written and oral comprehension.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** Low literacy skills (MESH:D019957), reading (MESH:D004410), complex (MESH:D048090)

## Full text

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## References

103 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11408358/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11408358