Abstract :
This paper investigates the relationship between the ability to detect changes in prosody and reading
performance in Spanish. Participants were children aged 6–8 years who completed tasks involving
reading words, reading pseudowords, stressing pseudowords, and reproducing pseudoword stress
patterns. Results showed that the capacity to reproduce pseudoword stress patterns accounted for a
unique portion of the variance in text reading, after controlling for phonological awareness, phoneme
sensitivity, and working memory. In addition, stress sensitivity predicted children’s performance in
stressing pseudowords. These results suggest that stress sensitivity may affect fluency in reading as
well as word stress learning.