Abstract
Lexicality effects and error type can indicate whether spelling relies on sub-lexical or lexical routes. We used non-words and words to examine spelling strategies across adulthood. Forty younger (mean age 24.70), 41 middle age (mean age 49.00), and 40 older adults (mean age 73.83) spelled 36 non-words that consisted of existing morphemes and 36 real words. Coding distinguished between homophonic errors in target letters, non-homophonic errors (e.g., letter substitution, insertion, transposition, or omission), and whole word substitution errors. Older adults demonstrated the largest lexicality effect, with the greatest difference between non-words and words. In addition, younger adults made more homophonic errors, fewer non-homophonic errors, and fewer word substitution errors than did older adults. The findings provide evidence for a greater reliance on the sub-lexical spelling route in younger age, as well as for a greater reliance on the lexical spelling route in older age.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Journal | Reading and Writing |
| DOIs | |
| State | Published - 14 Jan 2026 |
Bibliographical note
Publisher Copyright:© The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Nature B.V. 2026.
Keywords
- Aging
- Dual-route spelling model
- Hebrew morphology
- Lexicality effect
- Orthography
- Word retrieval
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