Automatic activation of sounds by letters occurs early in development but is not impaired in children with dyslexia
The automatic letter-sound integration hypothesis proposes that the decoding difficulties seen in dyslexia arise from a specific deficit in establishing automatic letter-sound associations. We report the findings of 2 studies in which we used a priming task to assess automatic letter-sound integrati...
Hlavní autoři: | Clayton, F, Hulme, C |
---|---|
Médium: | Journal article |
Vydáno: |
Taylor and Francis
2017
|
Podobné jednotky
-
The Automatic Activation of Sound-Letter Knowledge: An Alternative Interpretation of Analogy and Priming Effects in Early Spelling Development
Autor: Nation, K, a další
Vydáno: (1996) -
A longitudinal study of early reading development: Letter-sound knowledge, phoneme awareness and RAN, but not letter-sound integration, predict variations in reading development
Autor: Clayton, F, a další
Vydáno: (2019) -
When does speech sound disorder matter for literacy? The role of disordered speech errors, co-occurring language impairment, and family-risk of dyslexia
Autor: Hayiou-Thomas, M, a další
Vydáno: (2016) -
Are the literacy difficulties that characterise developmental dyslexia associated with a failure to integrate letters and speech sounds?
Autor: Nash, H, a další
Vydáno: (2016) -
The locus of impairment in English developmental letter position dyslexia
Autor: Yvette eKezilas, a další
Vydáno: (2014-06-01)