The most influential theory of learning to read is based on the idea that children rely on phonological decoding skills to learn novel words. According to the self-teaching hypothesis, each successful decoding encounter with an unfamiliar word provides an opportunity to acquire word-specific orthographic information that is the foundation of skilled word recognition. Therefore, phonological decoding acts as a self-teaching mechanism or 'built-in teacher'. However, all previous connectionist models have learned the task of reading aloud through exposure to a very large corpus of spelling-sound pairs, where an 'external' teacher supplies the pronunciation of all words that should be learnt. Such a supervised training regimen is highly implaus...
In this study, we examined the learning of new grapheme-phoneme correspondences in individuals with ...
Theories of normal reading development commonly propose that children move through various stages o...
This paper refers to and discusses empirical evidence supporting the general idea that both skilled ...
The most influential theory of learning to read is based on the idea that children rely on phonologi...
The self-teaching hypothesis describes how children progress toward skilled sight-word reading. It p...
Tests of the ''phonological deficit'' account of developmental dyslexia have produced apparently inc...
The development of decoding skills has traditionally been viewed as a stage-like process during whic...
International audienceHow do children learn to read? How do deficits in various components of the re...
The self-teaching hypothesis proposes that phonological recoding functions as a self-teaching mechan...
A theory is presented to explain the reading patterns found among dyslexics through a single process...
This article focuses on applying the SERIOL model of orthographic processing to dyslexia. The model ...
International audienceLearning to read is foundational for literacy development, yet many children i...
Reading acquisition involves learning to associate visual symbols with spoken language. Multiple lin...
International audienceDevelopmental dyslexia was investigated within a well-understood and fully spe...
Phonological decoding skill has been proposed to be key to successful sight word learning (orthograp...
In this study, we examined the learning of new grapheme-phoneme correspondences in individuals with ...
Theories of normal reading development commonly propose that children move through various stages o...
This paper refers to and discusses empirical evidence supporting the general idea that both skilled ...
The most influential theory of learning to read is based on the idea that children rely on phonologi...
The self-teaching hypothesis describes how children progress toward skilled sight-word reading. It p...
Tests of the ''phonological deficit'' account of developmental dyslexia have produced apparently inc...
The development of decoding skills has traditionally been viewed as a stage-like process during whic...
International audienceHow do children learn to read? How do deficits in various components of the re...
The self-teaching hypothesis proposes that phonological recoding functions as a self-teaching mechan...
A theory is presented to explain the reading patterns found among dyslexics through a single process...
This article focuses on applying the SERIOL model of orthographic processing to dyslexia. The model ...
International audienceLearning to read is foundational for literacy development, yet many children i...
Reading acquisition involves learning to associate visual symbols with spoken language. Multiple lin...
International audienceDevelopmental dyslexia was investigated within a well-understood and fully spe...
Phonological decoding skill has been proposed to be key to successful sight word learning (orthograp...
In this study, we examined the learning of new grapheme-phoneme correspondences in individuals with ...
Theories of normal reading development commonly propose that children move through various stages o...
This paper refers to and discusses empirical evidence supporting the general idea that both skilled ...