This article describes a Cantonese dyslexic patient with a dissociation between reading ability and oral naming, similar to previously reported cases of Chinese dyslexia. Additional semantic tests without pictorial input were given to localize his impairment to the semantic system. His largely preserved reading performance vis-à-vis semantic deficits, together with the absence of assembled phonology in Chinese, support a model of the Chinese lexicon in which reading can be achieved via two different lexical routes, one with semantic mediation and one without. The patient's poor ability to make homophony judgments of written characters and the high rate of tonal errors suggest that brain injury may have a more detrimental effect on suprasegm...
It is often assumed that oral reading of Chinese script proceeds from print to phonological output v...
This study addresses the issue of the existence of whole-word phonological representations of disyll...
This paper reports the influence of age-of-acquisition (AoA) effects on the oral reading accuracy of...
We report a Cantonese-speaking brain-damaged patient, CML, who demonstrates better oral reading than...
We report the oral reading performance of a Chinese anomic patient LJG, whose reduced confrontation ...
This study addressed the issue of whether oral reading of Chinese is mediated by semantics in childr...
Case reports of impaired cognitive and linguistic abilities in brain-injured adults are recognized t...
This paper describes the spoken error production of a Cantonese-speaking brain-injured patient. His ...
We report a Chinese-speaking dementia patient with left temporal lobe ischemic damage, WJX, who show...
This study examined a hypothesis discussed in Bi, Han, Weekes, and Shu (2007) of a non-lexical syste...
In this review, we describe a series of cognitive neuropsychological studies of Chinese speaking aph...
This study addresses the issue of the existence of whole-word phonological representations of disyll...
It is often assumed that oral reading of Chinese script proceeds from print to phonological output v...
It is often assumed that oral reading of Chinese script proceeds from print to phonological output v...
Dyslexia in alphabetic languages has been extensively investigated and suggests a central deficit in...
It is often assumed that oral reading of Chinese script proceeds from print to phonological output v...
This study addresses the issue of the existence of whole-word phonological representations of disyll...
This paper reports the influence of age-of-acquisition (AoA) effects on the oral reading accuracy of...
We report a Cantonese-speaking brain-damaged patient, CML, who demonstrates better oral reading than...
We report the oral reading performance of a Chinese anomic patient LJG, whose reduced confrontation ...
This study addressed the issue of whether oral reading of Chinese is mediated by semantics in childr...
Case reports of impaired cognitive and linguistic abilities in brain-injured adults are recognized t...
This paper describes the spoken error production of a Cantonese-speaking brain-injured patient. His ...
We report a Chinese-speaking dementia patient with left temporal lobe ischemic damage, WJX, who show...
This study examined a hypothesis discussed in Bi, Han, Weekes, and Shu (2007) of a non-lexical syste...
In this review, we describe a series of cognitive neuropsychological studies of Chinese speaking aph...
This study addresses the issue of the existence of whole-word phonological representations of disyll...
It is often assumed that oral reading of Chinese script proceeds from print to phonological output v...
It is often assumed that oral reading of Chinese script proceeds from print to phonological output v...
Dyslexia in alphabetic languages has been extensively investigated and suggests a central deficit in...
It is often assumed that oral reading of Chinese script proceeds from print to phonological output v...
This study addresses the issue of the existence of whole-word phonological representations of disyll...
This paper reports the influence of age-of-acquisition (AoA) effects on the oral reading accuracy of...