Several data from both skilled readers and children with dyslexia revealed that the pronunciation of a derived low-frequency word can be improved by the recognition of its high-frequency base, thus indicating the use of morpho-lexical information in reading aloud. This study aims at investigating whether the grammatical class of base words contributes to the morpho-lexical effect on reading derived nouns. Many studies found that nouns and verbs are differently processed, thus the reading performance with derived nouns could be more affected by the activation of same-class bases (noun) than by the activation of verb bases. This difference may emerge in children with dyslexia due to their difficulty in processing verbal forms with respect to ...
A previous study reported that, similar to young and adult skilled readers, Italian developmental d...
The aim of this study is to assess the role of readers’ proficiency and of the base-word distributio...
International audienceWe investigated whether children with dyslexia rely on derivational morphology...
Several data from both skilled readers and children with dyslexia revealed that the pronunciation of...
This contribute is aimed at assessing whether the differences in verb and noun processing, found in ...
Recent reading models focusing on the role of morphemic units have addressed the issue of how orthog...
Several studies proved that detecting morphemic constituents in long strings of letters leads to a r...
In previous studies (Traficante & Burani, 2003; Traficante et al., submitted) we found that inflecte...
Several studies on children and adults with and without linguistic impairment have reported differen...
In this study, we assess the reading performance of a deep dyslexic patient, GR, in order to disting...
Item does not contain fulltextWe investigated whether children with dyslexia show enhanced semantic ...
The role of morphology in reading aloud was examined measuring naming latencies to pseudowords and w...
It has been well documented that morphemic structure (roots and affixes) have an impact in reading, ...
Several studies have shown the role of morphological structure when processing complex words. Howeve...
Italian sixth graders, with and without dyslexia, read pseudowords and low-frequency words that incl...
A previous study reported that, similar to young and adult skilled readers, Italian developmental d...
The aim of this study is to assess the role of readers’ proficiency and of the base-word distributio...
International audienceWe investigated whether children with dyslexia rely on derivational morphology...
Several data from both skilled readers and children with dyslexia revealed that the pronunciation of...
This contribute is aimed at assessing whether the differences in verb and noun processing, found in ...
Recent reading models focusing on the role of morphemic units have addressed the issue of how orthog...
Several studies proved that detecting morphemic constituents in long strings of letters leads to a r...
In previous studies (Traficante & Burani, 2003; Traficante et al., submitted) we found that inflecte...
Several studies on children and adults with and without linguistic impairment have reported differen...
In this study, we assess the reading performance of a deep dyslexic patient, GR, in order to disting...
Item does not contain fulltextWe investigated whether children with dyslexia show enhanced semantic ...
The role of morphology in reading aloud was examined measuring naming latencies to pseudowords and w...
It has been well documented that morphemic structure (roots and affixes) have an impact in reading, ...
Several studies have shown the role of morphological structure when processing complex words. Howeve...
Italian sixth graders, with and without dyslexia, read pseudowords and low-frequency words that incl...
A previous study reported that, similar to young and adult skilled readers, Italian developmental d...
The aim of this study is to assess the role of readers’ proficiency and of the base-word distributio...
International audienceWe investigated whether children with dyslexia rely on derivational morphology...