Letter position coding in attentional dyslexia.

We report data from experiments on orthographic and phonological coding in two patients with attentional dyslexia following bilateral parietal damage. Two experiments required the patients to carry out lexical decisions and we varied whether the nonwords were orthographically or phonologically simil...

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Main Authors: Shalev, L, Mevorach, C, Humphreys, G
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: 2008
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author Shalev, L
Mevorach, C
Humphreys, G
author_facet Shalev, L
Mevorach, C
Humphreys, G
author_sort Shalev, L
collection OXFORD
description We report data from experiments on orthographic and phonological coding in two patients with attentional dyslexia following bilateral parietal damage. Two experiments required the patients to carry out lexical decisions and we varied whether the nonwords were orthographically or phonologically similar to real words. Experiment 1 showed that the patients were sensitive to the orthographic relations between nonwords and words, as they tended to accept as words nonwords whose letters could migrate within the string to form a word. There were no effects of phonological similarity between the nonwords and the words. Experiment 2 demonstrated that the patients were less likely to accept nonwords as words if the word had to be formed by transposing the first two letters in the string. The data suggest that attentional dyslexics are primarily sensitive to orthographic similarity between words and nonwords, and also that the first letters have privileged coding of their locations, despite the patients being poor at coding letter positions. The implications for theories of visual word recognition are discussed.
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spelling oxford-uuid:94dd897d-46f3-43cb-945f-17380cc87bcf2022-03-26T23:42:19ZLetter position coding in attentional dyslexia.Journal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:94dd897d-46f3-43cb-945f-17380cc87bcfEnglishSymplectic Elements at Oxford2008Shalev, LMevorach, CHumphreys, GWe report data from experiments on orthographic and phonological coding in two patients with attentional dyslexia following bilateral parietal damage. Two experiments required the patients to carry out lexical decisions and we varied whether the nonwords were orthographically or phonologically similar to real words. Experiment 1 showed that the patients were sensitive to the orthographic relations between nonwords and words, as they tended to accept as words nonwords whose letters could migrate within the string to form a word. There were no effects of phonological similarity between the nonwords and the words. Experiment 2 demonstrated that the patients were less likely to accept nonwords as words if the word had to be formed by transposing the first two letters in the string. The data suggest that attentional dyslexics are primarily sensitive to orthographic similarity between words and nonwords, and also that the first letters have privileged coding of their locations, despite the patients being poor at coding letter positions. The implications for theories of visual word recognition are discussed.
spellingShingle Shalev, L
Mevorach, C
Humphreys, G
Letter position coding in attentional dyslexia.
title Letter position coding in attentional dyslexia.
title_full Letter position coding in attentional dyslexia.
title_fullStr Letter position coding in attentional dyslexia.
title_full_unstemmed Letter position coding in attentional dyslexia.
title_short Letter position coding in attentional dyslexia.
title_sort letter position coding in attentional dyslexia
work_keys_str_mv AT shalevl letterpositioncodinginattentionaldyslexia
AT mevorachc letterpositioncodinginattentionaldyslexia
AT humphreysg letterpositioncodinginattentionaldyslexia