Semantic and Phonological Coding in Poor and Normal Readers

Three studies were conducted evaluating semantic and phonological coding deficits as alternative explanations of reading disability. In the first study, poor and normal readers in second and sixth grade were compared on various tests evaluating semantic development as well as on tests evaluating rap...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of experimental child psychology 1995-02, Vol.59 (1), p.76-123
Hauptverfasser: Vellutino, Frank R., Scanlon, Donna M., Spearing, Debra
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Scanlon, Donna M.
Spearing, Debra
description Three studies were conducted evaluating semantic and phonological coding deficits as alternative explanations of reading disability. In the first study, poor and normal readers in second and sixth grade were compared on various tests evaluating semantic development as well as on tests evaluating rapid naming and pseudoword decoding as independent measures of phonological coding ability. In a second study, the same subjects were given verbal memory and visual-verbal learning tasks using high and low meaning words as verbal stimuli and Chinese ideographs as visual stimuli. On the semantic tasks, poor readers performed below the level of the normal readers only at the sixth grade level, but, on the rapid naming and pseudoword learning tasks, they performed below the normal readers at the second as well as the sixth grade level. On both the verbal memory and visual-verbal learning tasks, performance in poor readers approximated that of normal readers when the word stimuli were high in meaning but not when they were low in meaning. These patterns were essentially replicated in a third study that used some of the same semantic and phonological measures used in the first experiment, and verbal and visual-verbal learning tasks that employed word lists and visual stimuli (novel alphabetic characters) that more closely approximated those used in learning to read. It was concluded that semantic coding deficits are an unlikely cause of reading difficulties in most poor readers at the beginning stages of reading skills acquisition, but accrue as a consequence of prolonged reading difficulties in older readers. It was also concluded that phonological coding deficits are a probable cause of reading difficulties in most poor readers.
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subjects Age Differences
Biological and medical sciences
Child
Child clinical studies
Child psychology
Children
Context Clues
Decoding (Reading)
Dyslexia - diagnosis
Dyslexia - psychology
Female
Humans
Language and communication disorders
Learning disabilities
Male
Medical sciences
Mental Recall
Paired-Associate Learning
Pattern Recognition, Visual
Phoneme Grapheme Correspondence
Phonetics
Phonological Processing
Psychology. Psychoanalysis. Psychiatry
Psychopathology. Psychiatry
Reaction Time
Reading
Reading Difficulties
Reading Processes
Reading Research
Recall (Psychology)
Semantic Memory
Semantics
Vocabulary
Wechsler Scales
Word Recognition
title Semantic and Phonological Coding in Poor and Normal Readers
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