In orthographic reading, the transposed-letter effect (TLE) is the perception of a transposed-letter position word such as "cholocate" as the correct word "chocolate." Although previous studies on dyslexic children using alphabetic languages have reported such orthographic reading deficits, the extent of orthographic reading impairment in dyslexic Japanese children has remained unknown. This study examined the TLE in dyslexic Japanese children using the color-word Stroop paradigm comprising congruent and incongruent Japanese hiragana words with correct and transposed-letter positions. We found that typically developed children exhibited Stroop effects in Japanese hiragana words with both correct and transposed-letter positions, thus indicat...
Item does not contain fulltextFirst-letter naming was used to investigate the role of phonology in p...
Dyslexia in alphabetic languages has been extensively investigated and suggests a central deficit in...
Italian children with surface dyslexia and dysgraphia show defective orthographic lexical processing...
International audienceThe ability to identify letters and encode their position is a crucial step of...
The study examines the effects on the reading aloud of the numerosity of words differing from a give...
Many children with reading difficulties display phonological deficits and struggle to acquire non-le...
This article focuses on applying the SERIOL model of orthographic processing to dyslexia. The model ...
International audienceTo evaluate the orthographic and phonological processing skills of development...
A growing body of evidence based on monolingual and bilingual research shows that normal and impaire...
An event-related potential (ERP) experiment was conducted to explore the differences between Chinese...
Spanish-speaking children learn to read words printed in a relatively transparent orthography. Varia...
Imageability has been shown to affect word naming in English where print-to-sound translation is ass...
Recently, a number of influential writers have emphasized the role of orthography in the development...
Spanish-speaking children learn to read words printed in a relatively transparent orthography. Varia...
In languages with regular orthographies, the identification of different forms of reading impairment...
Item does not contain fulltextFirst-letter naming was used to investigate the role of phonology in p...
Dyslexia in alphabetic languages has been extensively investigated and suggests a central deficit in...
Italian children with surface dyslexia and dysgraphia show defective orthographic lexical processing...
International audienceThe ability to identify letters and encode their position is a crucial step of...
The study examines the effects on the reading aloud of the numerosity of words differing from a give...
Many children with reading difficulties display phonological deficits and struggle to acquire non-le...
This article focuses on applying the SERIOL model of orthographic processing to dyslexia. The model ...
International audienceTo evaluate the orthographic and phonological processing skills of development...
A growing body of evidence based on monolingual and bilingual research shows that normal and impaire...
An event-related potential (ERP) experiment was conducted to explore the differences between Chinese...
Spanish-speaking children learn to read words printed in a relatively transparent orthography. Varia...
Imageability has been shown to affect word naming in English where print-to-sound translation is ass...
Recently, a number of influential writers have emphasized the role of orthography in the development...
Spanish-speaking children learn to read words printed in a relatively transparent orthography. Varia...
In languages with regular orthographies, the identification of different forms of reading impairment...
Item does not contain fulltextFirst-letter naming was used to investigate the role of phonology in p...
Dyslexia in alphabetic languages has been extensively investigated and suggests a central deficit in...
Italian children with surface dyslexia and dysgraphia show defective orthographic lexical processing...