Item does not contain fulltextFirst-letter naming was used to investigate the role of phonology in printed word perception in children with and without dyslexia. In 2 experiments, all children showed faster first-letter-naming times in a congruent condition than in an incongruent condition, which suggests that phonology is a fundamental constraint in the printed word perception of readers of all levels and all skills. An explanation in terms of a recurrent network put forward by G. C. Van Orden and S. D. Goldinger (1996) is discussed to account for the apparent paradox in the reading behavior of readers with dyslexia, that is, that in first-letter naming, dyslexic readers appear to show phonological congruity effects, whereas in pseudoword ...
A theory is presented to explain the reading patterns found among dyslexics through a single process...
As phonological processing difficulties appear to be a central feature related to dyslexia, research...
This paper reviews evidence in support of the phonological deficit hypothesis of dyslexia. Findings ...
First-letter naming was used to investigate the role of phonology in printed word perception in chil...
Twenty-four children with dyslexia (aged 7;7 to 12;1) and twenty-four age-matched controls named pic...
The locus of the deficit of children with dyslexia in dealing with strings of letters may be a defic...
This thesis reports an investigation of the component processes underlying reading fluency. A curren...
Item does not contain fulltextWe investigated whether children with dyslexia show enhanced semantic ...
Repetition priming was used to examine whether children with dyslexia bias a lexical–semantic pathwa...
This article focuses on applying the SERIOL model of orthographic processing to dyslexia. The model ...
One implication of the double-deficit hypothesis for dyslexia is that there should be subtypes of dy...
PURPOSE: To verify the universal nature of the phonological processing deficit hypothesis for dyslex...
This study examined the ability to master lexical processing and use knowledge of the relative frequ...
Whilst there is general consensus that phonological processing is deficient in developmental dyslexi...
One implication of the double-deficit hypothesis for dyslexia is that there should be subtypes of dy...
A theory is presented to explain the reading patterns found among dyslexics through a single process...
As phonological processing difficulties appear to be a central feature related to dyslexia, research...
This paper reviews evidence in support of the phonological deficit hypothesis of dyslexia. Findings ...
First-letter naming was used to investigate the role of phonology in printed word perception in chil...
Twenty-four children with dyslexia (aged 7;7 to 12;1) and twenty-four age-matched controls named pic...
The locus of the deficit of children with dyslexia in dealing with strings of letters may be a defic...
This thesis reports an investigation of the component processes underlying reading fluency. A curren...
Item does not contain fulltextWe investigated whether children with dyslexia show enhanced semantic ...
Repetition priming was used to examine whether children with dyslexia bias a lexical–semantic pathwa...
This article focuses on applying the SERIOL model of orthographic processing to dyslexia. The model ...
One implication of the double-deficit hypothesis for dyslexia is that there should be subtypes of dy...
PURPOSE: To verify the universal nature of the phonological processing deficit hypothesis for dyslex...
This study examined the ability to master lexical processing and use knowledge of the relative frequ...
Whilst there is general consensus that phonological processing is deficient in developmental dyslexi...
One implication of the double-deficit hypothesis for dyslexia is that there should be subtypes of dy...
A theory is presented to explain the reading patterns found among dyslexics through a single process...
As phonological processing difficulties appear to be a central feature related to dyslexia, research...
This paper reviews evidence in support of the phonological deficit hypothesis of dyslexia. Findings ...