690 research outputs found

    Predictors of developmental dyslexia in European orthographies with varying complexity

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    Background: The relationship between phoneme awareness, rapid automatized naming (RAN), verbal short-term/working memory (ST/WM) and diagnostic category is investigated in control and dyslexic children, and the extent to which this depends on orthographic complexity. Methods: General cognitive, phonological and literacy skills were tested in 1138 control and 1114 dyslexic children speaking 6 different languages spanning a large range of orthographic complexity (Finnish, Hungarian, German, Dutch, French, English). Results: Phoneme deletion and RAN were strong concurrent predictors of developmental dyslexia, while verbal ST/WM and general verbal abilities played a comparatively minor role. In logistic regression models, more participants were classified correctly when orthography was more complex. The impact of phoneme deletion and RAN-digits was stronger in complex than in less complex orthographies. Conclusions: Findings are largely consistent with the literature on predictors of dyslexia and literacy skills, while uniquely demonstrating how orthographic complexity exacerbates some symptoms of dyslexia

    Cognitive precursors of reading : A cross-linguistic perspective

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    In this paper, we survey current evidence on cognitive precursors of reading in different orthographies by reviewing studies with a cross-linguistic research design. Graphic symbol knowledge, phonological awareness, morphological awareness, and rapid automatized naming were found to be associated with reading acquisition in all orthographies investigated. However, apart from rapid naming, this association is mostly interactive, meaning that young children develop their symbol knowledge, and phonological and morphological awareness during reading development. Especially for phonological awareness, cross-linguistic evidence involving phonologically transparent orthographies, both alphabetic and non-alphabetic, suggests that it may be less of a hurdle than in the complex English orthography. Cross-linguistic research designs can be a useful methodological approach to test limits of reading theories that were initially developed for alphabetic orthographies

    Egy hullámhosszon: neuro-tudományos felismerések az egymásra hangolódás szerepéről a tanulási folyamatok során

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    A pedagógia, mint tudomány elméletében és gyakorlatában is központi kérdéskör annak vizsgálata, hogy miként lehetne elérni, hogy a nevelési-oktatási folyamat során minden gyermek az adott szociokulturális közeg, társadalom elvárásainak megfelelően elérjen egy bizonyos neveltségi szintet, avagy szűkebben értelmezve, hogy minden tanuló elsajátítsa az adott tananyagot. Ez többé – kevésbé be is szokott következni, de a gyermekek teljesítményében jelentős eltérések mutatkoznak. A kutatókat kezdettől foglalkoztatja az a kérdés, hogy ezekben a folyamatokban milyen szerepe van az emberek közötti interakcióknak. Tanulmányom ehhez a témakörhöz kapcsolódóan ad rövid áttekintést

    insights from different stages of language acquisition

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    Solving arithmetic problems is a cognitive task that heavily relies on language processing. One might thus wonder whether this language-reliance leads to qualitative differences (e.g., greater difficulties, error types, etc.) in arithmetic for bilingual individuals who frequently have to solve arithmetic problems in more than one language. The present study investigated how proficiency in two languages interacts with arithmetic problem solving throughout language acquisition in adolescents and young adults. Additionally, we examined whether the number word structure that is specific to a given language plays a role in number processing over and above bilingual proficiency. We addressed these issues in a German–French educational bilingual setting, where there is a progressive transition from German to French as teaching language. Importantly, German and French number naming structures differ clearly, as two-digit number names follow a unit-ten order in German, but a ten-unit order in French. We implemented a transversal developmental design in which bilingual pupils from grades 7, 8, 10, 11, and young adults were asked to solve simple and complex additions in both languages. The results confirmed that language proficiency is crucial especially for complex addition computation. Simple additions in contrast can be retrieved equally well in both languages after extended language practice. Additional analyses revealed that over and above language proficiency, language-specific number word structures (e.g., unit-ten vs. ten-unit) also induced significant modulations of bilinguals' arithmetic performances. Taken together, these findings support the view of a strong relation between language and arithmetic in bilinguals

    Home literacy environment and early literacy development across languages varying in orthographic consistency

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    We examined the relation between home literacy environment (HLE) and early literacy development in a sample of children learning four alphabetic orthographies varying in orthographic consistency (English, Dutch, German, and Greek). Seven hundred and fourteen children were followed from Grade 1 to Grade 2 and tested on emergent literacy skills (vocabulary, letter knowledge, and phonological awareness) at the beginning of Grade 1 and on word reading fluency and spelling at the end of Grade 1, the beginning of Grade 2, and the end of Grade 2. Their parents responded to a questionnaire assessing HLE [parent teaching (PT), shared book reading (SBR), access to literacy resources (ALR)] at the beginning of Grade 1. Results showed first that PT was associated with letter knowledge or phonological awareness in Dutch and Greek, while ALR was associated with emergent literacy skills in all languages. SBR did not predict any cognitive or early literacy skills in any language. Second, PT and ALR had indirect effects on literacy outcomes via different emergent literacy skills in all languages. These findings suggest that not all HLE components are equally important for emergent literacy skills, reading fluency, and spelling. No specific trend in the role of orthographic consistency in the aforementioned relations emerged, which suggests that other factors may account for the observed differences across languages when children start receiving formal reading instruction in Grade 1

    Neuropedagógiai innovációs lehetőségek a neveléstudományi kutatások-ban az EMOTIV EPOC+ mobil EEG készülék alkalmazásával

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    A Soproni Egyetem Benedek Elek Pedagógiai Karán 2017-ben gyermekneurológusok, neveléstudományi kutatók, pszichológusok és gyakorló pedagógusok bevonásával indult el a Kisgyermekkori Neuropedagógia Kutatócsoport. A közös kutatómunka egyik jelentős szegmensét képezi a „Soproni Egyetem Struktúraváltási Terve” - 32388-2/2017 INTFIN sz. projekt keretében az Emberi Erőforrások Minisztériuma támogatásával vásárolt EMOTIV EPOC+ mobil EEG készülékek alkalmazhatóságának vizsgálata. Poszterprezentációnk egyrészről a gyermeki fejlődés – különös tekintettel az iskolaérettség – monitorozására alkalmazott klasszikus vizsgálatokat tekinti át, majd ezen vizsgálatokkal összefüggésben, a pedagógiai gyakorlatra is adaptálható innovációs sikertényezők mentén elemzi az EMOTIV EPOC+ mobil EEG készülék alkalmazhatóságát a neveléstudományi kutatásokban. Az innovációs sikertényezők közül vizsgáljuk az EMOTIV EPOC+ mobil EEG készülék alkalmazásában rejlő relatív előnyöket, a kompatibilitást, a potenciális alkalmazók innovációs szükségleteit és fogékonyságát, a megfigyelhetőséget és a kipróbálhatóságot, valamint az alkalmazás során tapasztalt hátrányokat, nehézségeket

    Intrusion of orthographic knowledge on phoneme awareness: Strong in normal readers, weak in dyslexic readers

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    In three typical phonological awareness tasks it was found that children with normal reading development sometimes give responses that are based on orthographic rather than phonological information. In dyslexic children, the number of occurrences of such orthographic intrusions was significantly lower. This effect cannot be explained by positing a lower degree of orthographic knowledge in dyslexic children since a group of younger children who had the same spelling level as the dyslexics also showed more orthographic intrusions. A plausible explanation for this difference between normal and dyslexic readers is that, in normal readers, phonological and orthographic representations of words are so closely connected that they are usually coactivated, even if such a coactivation is misleading. In dyslexics this connection is less strong, so that orthographic representations interfere less with phonemic segmentation. The relevance of this finding with respect to recent assumptions about the importance of phonology in establishing orthographic representations is discussed
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