Results 31 to 40 of about 9,083 (250)
The decoding of visually presented line segments into letters, and letters into words, is critical to fluent reading abilities. Here we investigate the temporal dynamics of visual orthographic processes, focusing specifically on right hemisphere ...
Lawrence Gregory Appelbaum +5 more
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Processing Orthographic Structure: Associations Between Print and Fingerspelling [PDF]
Two lexical decision experiments are reported that investigate whether the same segmentation strategies are used for reading printed English words and fingerspelled words (in American Sign Language). Experiment 1 revealed that both deaf and hearing readers performed better when written words were segmented with respect to an orthographically defined ...
Karen, Emmorey, Jennifer A F, Petrich
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Reading alphasyllabic hindi: contributions from phonological and orthographic domains
Phonological and orthographic processing are important cognitive skills required in reading. The present study attempts to investigate the role of phonological processing and orthographic knowledge, in reading alphasyllabic Hindi orthography.
Khan Azizuddin, Bajre Purnima
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Semantic Processing and Orthographic Specificity in Hemispatial Neglect [PDF]
Abstract Two sets of experiments, each consisting of a semantic priming task and a discrimination task, investigated the proceedings of lexical information in the neglected visual field. In the semantic priming task, subjects made lexical decisions to target words preceded by lateralized word primes; in the discrimination task, they ...
McGlinchey-Berroth, Regina +5 more
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Naming in noise: the contribution of orthographic knowledge to speech repetition
While the influence of orthographic knowledge on lexical and postlexical speech processing tasks has been consistently observed, it is not the case in tasks that can be performed at the prelexical level.
Chotiga ePattamadilok +3 more
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Orthographic transparency modulates the grain size of orthographic processing: Behavioral and ERP evidence from bilingualism [PDF]
Grapheme-to-phoneme mapping regularity is thought to determine the grain size of orthographic information extracted whilst encoding letter strings. Here we tested whether learning to read in two languages differing in their orthographic transparency yields different strategies used for encoding letter-strings as compared to learning to read in one ...
Lallier, Marie +4 more
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Orthographic knowledge as a predictor of reading and spelling in isiXhosa third graders
Background: Research acknowledges the importance of phonological processing and orthographic processing for reading and spelling in both consistently and inconsistently written languages.
Mikaela A. Daries, Tracy N. Bowles
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Paying attention to orthography: A visual evoked potential study
In adult readers, letters and words are rapidly identified within visual networks to allow for efficient reading abilities. Neuroimaging studies of orthography have mostly used words and letter strings that recruit many hierarchical levels in reading ...
Anthony Thomas Herdman, Osamu eTakai
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The Neural Signature of Statistical Learning of Orthography
While an increasing number of behavioral studies suggest the importance of statistical learning in acquiring orthographic regularity across writing systems, no direct neural evidence supports this claim.
Xiuhong Tong +2 more
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An orthographic effect in phoneme processing, and its limitations [PDF]
In three phoneme goodness rating experiments, listeners heard phonetic tokens varying along a continuum centered on /s/, occurring finally in isolated word or non-word tokens. An effect of spelling appeared in Experiment 1: native English-speakers' goodness ratings for the best /s/ tokens were significantly higher in words spelled with S (e.g., bless ...
Anne eCutler, Chris eDavis
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