Reading ability underlies the composite effect for Arabic words
Rayan Kouzy, Zahra Hussain

TL;DR
The study shows that the composite effect for Arabic words is linked to reading ability, similar to Latin script, and not to script complexity.
Contribution
The research demonstrates that reading expertise, not script properties, drives the composite effect in Arabic.
Findings
Arabic-English bilinguals showed a composite effect for Arabic words, but English-only readers did not.
Both groups showed the composite effect for English words, indicating script familiarity is key.
Graphemic complexity and cursive nature of Arabic script did not influence the composite effect in skilled readers.
Abstract
The composite effect, originally demonstrated for faces, has recently been shown to suggest holistic processing of words. The effect is associated with reading fluency in Latin script, but not in nonalphabetic Chinese script, suggesting that script properties influence its relationship with reading expertise. We measured the composite effect for Arabic, a visually complex alphabetic script that offers a useful contrast against Latin and Chinese. Arabic-English bilinguals ( N= 24), and English-only readers ( N= 22) completed a composite effect task, in which they judged whether the left or right halves of word pairs were the same or different. The unattended half was either congruent or incongruent with the judgement, and the halves were presented in aligned or misaligned blocks. The composite effect, a reduction in the effect of congruency when the halves are misaligned, typically is…
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Taxonomy
TopicsReading and Literacy Development · Neurobiology of Language and Bilingualism · Child and Animal Learning Development
