DE eng

Search in the Catalogues and Directories

Page: 1 2 3 4 5...172
Hits 1 – 20 of 3.427

1
Evidence from ERP and Eye Movements as Markers of Language Dysfunction in Dyslexia
In: ISSN: 2076-3425 ; Brain Sciences ; https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-03641338 ; Brain Sciences, MDPI, 2022, 12 (1), pp.73. ⟨10.3390/brainsci12010073⟩ (2022)
BASE
Show details
2
Auditory Processing and Reading Disability: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis ...
McWeeny, Sean. - : Open Science Framework, 2022
BASE
Show details
3
Use of Parsing Heuristics in the Comprehension of Passive Sentences: Evidence from Dyslexia and Individual Differences
In: Brain Sciences; Volume 12; Issue 2; Pages: 209 (2022)
BASE
Show details
4
What Is Going on with Visual Attention in Reading and Dyslexia? A Critical Review of Recent Studies
In: Brain Sciences; Volume 12; Issue 1; Pages: 87 (2022)
BASE
Show details
5
Remote Dyslexia Screening for Bilingual Children
In: Multimodal Technologies and Interaction; Volume 6; Issue 1; Pages: 7 (2022)
BASE
Show details
6
The Role of Auditory and Visual Components in Reading Training: No Additional Effect of Synchronized Visual Cue in a Rhythm-Based Intervention for Dyslexia
In: Applied Sciences; Volume 12; Issue 7; Pages: 3360 (2022)
BASE
Show details
7
Reduced Theta Sampling in Infants at Risk for Dyslexia across the Sensitive Period of Native Phoneme Learning
In: International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health; Volume 19; Issue 3; Pages: 1180 (2022)
BASE
Show details
8
Success Is Not the Entire Story for a Scientific Theory: The Case of the Phonological Deficit Theory of Dyslexia
In: Brain Sciences; Volume 12; Issue 4; Pages: 425 (2022)
BASE
Show details
9
Direct and Indirect Effects of Blood Levels of Omega-3 and Omega-6 Fatty Acids on Reading and Writing (Dis)Abilities
In: Brain Sciences; Volume 12; Issue 2; Pages: 169 (2022)
BASE
Show details
10
Later but Not Weaker: Neural Categorization of Native Vowels of Children at Familial Risk of Dyslexia
In: Brain Sciences; Volume 12; Issue 3; Pages: 412 (2022)
BASE
Show details
11
Evidence from ERP and Eye Movements as Markers of Language Dysfunction in Dyslexia
In: Brain Sciences; Volume 12; Issue 1; Pages: 73 (2022)
BASE
Show details
12
The Percentages of Cognitive Skills Deficits among Chinese Children with Developmental Dyslexia: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis
In: Brain Sciences; Volume 12; Issue 5; Pages: 548 (2022)
BASE
Show details
13
Genetic Modulation of the Neonatal Neural Processing of Speech at High and Low Familial Risk for Developmental Dyslexia ...
Georgieva, Stanimira. - : Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository, 2022
BASE
Show details
14
Direct and Indirect Effects of Blood Levels of Omega-3 and Omega-6 Fatty Acids on Reading and Writing (Dis)abilities
BASE
Show details
15
Music-based and auditory-based interventions for reading difficulties: A literature review
Cancer, Alice (orcid:0000-0003-3545-8540); Antonietti, Alessandro (orcid:0000-0002-7212-8076). - 2022
BASE
Show details
16
The Role of Auditory and Visual Components in Reading Training: No Additional Effect of Synchronized Visual Cue in a Rhythm-Based Intervention for Dyslexia
Cancer, Alice (orcid:0000-0003-3545-8540); De Salvatore, Marinella; Granocchio, Elisa. - 2022
BASE
Show details
17
Approaching dyslexia through ICT in the Art CLIL classroom
Gallacher, Alexander James. - : Universidad de Córdoba, 2022
BASE
Show details
18
Measuring the impact of dyslexia : striking a successful balance for individuals, families and society
Hayes, Carol. - New York : Routledge, 2021
BLLDB
UB Frankfurt Linguistik
Show details
19
Move to read: entrainment activities and pre-reading skills of kindergarteners
BASE
Show details
20
An examination of reading, reading development and disorder in a highly transparent orthography: the case of Turkish
Raman, Evren Hussein. - : Brunel University London, 2021
Abstract: This thesis was submitted for the award of Doctor of Philosophy and was awarded by Brunel University London ; The primary focus of the current research program concerns visual word recognition and reading aloud as a function of orthographic transparency to inform current debates about the nature of visual word recognition. Within this thesis, this topic is explored using several different approaches with Turkish as the medium of choice. Additionally, the extreme orthographic transparency of Turkish serves as an excellent medium to test theories of visual word recognition. Any universal framework would need to account for the variation found in the writing systems of the Turkic family. Using a computational linguistic method, Chapter 2 explores current definitions of orthographic transparency and novel means of quantifying orthography, extending this approach to Turkish. The result was the production of four language models that take into account the different phoneme inventories used in Turkish, as well as the two main strategies (Word-onset vs whole-word), employed to investigate the quantification of Turkish. The models produced stipulate that Turkish is more transparent than any other alphabetic orthography that has been quantified to date. The chapter also highlights the superiority of whole-word approaches in capturing a full range of variation within an orthography despite some of the current cross-linguistic limitations of using such a method. Chapter 3 examines the currently available resources for Turkish psycholinguistic research and in response to the discovery of a lack of resources in the domain, has led to the creation of the Turkish Lexicon database. The new resource is a sizeable psycholinguistic database that includes several measures of word frequency, contextual diversity and orthographic neighbourhood density as well as providing lexical information such as word and syllable length, bigram and trigram frequency. The Turkish Lexicon was validated using a lexical decision task and also produced a subcorpus for use in future psycholinguistic studies with children. Furthermore, there has been hardly any empirical research investigating linguistic, metalinguistic, and cognitive processes involved in reading the highly transparent orthography of Turkish. To address this, Chapters 4 and 5 investigate how these skills might impact Turkish children who are learning to read and also aims to uncover how developmental dyslexia might manifest itself in Turkish. As such, the current research has the potential to add to our understanding of the cognitive mechanisms that underlie reading in alphabetic languages. It is envisaged that the findings of this study will add to the current debate concerning the distinct influence of universal principles and specific variations in writing systems on cognitive reading processes. In addition, the research will provide conceivably the most comprehensive account of typical and atypical reading development in Turkish-speaking children to date which has huge potential practical implications. Chapter 4 examines the reading strategies of monolingual Turkish schoolchildren while they completed both a single-word naming and oral reading fluency task amongst a battery of cognitive tasks. The findings of the rapid development of phonology as well as the use of two distinct strategies in single-word reading lend support to the weak versions of the phonological and orthographic depth hypothesis of reading. Chapter 5 continues to pursue this question by examining reading disorder, i.e., Developmental Dyslexia in Turkish children. According to Wydell and Butterworth's (1999) Hypothesis of Transparency and Granularity, transparent orthographies such as Turkish should not manifest with a high incidence of phonological dyslexia. The findings of Chapter 5 lend support to this position as well as being in line with multiple deficit models of dyslexia (Pennington, 2006). In Chapter 6, the behavioural data of this doctoral thesis is supplemented with the development of a computational model of visual word recognition in Turkish, the first of its kind. The model builds on the recent incorporation of a self-teaching algorithm (Pritchard, 2012) in the Dual Route Cascaded model of reading aloud and word recognition (Coltheart, Rastle, Perry, Langdon, & Ziegler, 2001). Simulations include exposing the model to vocabularies of varying size to simulate different stages of vocabulary growth in reading development. In addition, Chapter 6 took preliminary steps in investigating the manifestation of developmental dyslexia in Turkish from a computational perspective.
Keyword: Cognitive science; Developmental dyslexia; Psycholinguistics; Reading; Visual word recognition
URL: http://bura.brunel.ac.uk/handle/2438/23067
BASE
Hide details

Page: 1 2 3 4 5...172

Catalogues
276
6
595
0
0
2
2
Bibliographies
2.218
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
6
Linked Open Data catalogues
0
Online resources
10
0
0
0
Open access documents
1.144
0
0
0
0
© 2013 - 2024 Lin|gu|is|tik | Imprint | Privacy Policy | Datenschutzeinstellungen ändern