AI Article Synopsis

  • Developmental dyslexic (DD) children face difficulties with sublexical orthographic, phonological, and semantic processing, affecting their ability to recognize words visually.
  • A study involving 50 DD and 47 typically developing (TD) third graders assessed their responses to different types of pseudo characters related to semantic and phonetic factors.
  • Results indicated that DD children rely more on phonetic processing compared to TD children, suggesting that sublexical phonological processing plays a significant role in how DD children recognize words.

Article Abstract

Developmental dyslexic (DD) children encounter challenges in sublexical orthographic, phonological, and semantic processing. However, there exists limited knowledge about the predominance of these three types of sublexical processing in visual word recognition among DD children. To investigate this issue, we screened 50 DD and 47 typically developing (TD) third-grade native Chinese-speaking children, and employed a picture-novel character mapping task. We constructed four types of options: semantic radical-legal position pseudo characters (e.g., ), phonetic radical-legal position pseudo characters (e.g., ), semantic radical-illegal position false characters (e.g., ), and phonetic radical-illegal position false characters (e.g., ). Results in the multilevel logistic mixed-effects regression analysis revealed that semantic radical-legal position pseudo characters were more predictive for the trial-level participants' response of TD children, whereas phonetic radical-legal position pseudo characters were more predictive for the trial-level participants' response of DD children. Consistently, semantic radical-legal position pseudo characters were poorer predictors, while phonetic radical-legal position pseudo characters were stronger predictors for the trial-level participants' response of DD children than for that of TD children. These findings collectively suggest the predominance of sublexical orthographic and phonological processing in DD children's visual word recognition, and DD children may rely more on the sublexical phonological processing relative to TD children.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/dys.1795DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

radical-legal position
24
position pseudo
24
pseudo characters
24
phonological processing
12
visual word
12
word recognition
12
semantic radical-legal
12
phonetic radical-legal
12
trial-level participants'
12
participants' response
12

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!