Search results for " NAMING"

showing 10 items of 52 documents

Longitudinal interactions between brain and cognitive measures on reading development from 6 months to 14 years

2017

Dyslexia is a neurobiological disorder impairing learning to read. Brain responses of infants at genetic risk for dyslexia are abnormal already at birth, and associations from infant speech perception to preschool cognitive skills and reading in early school years have been documented, but there are no studies showing predicting power until adolescence. Here we show that in at-risk infants, brain activation to pseudowords at left hemisphere predicts 44% of reading speed at 14 years, and even improves the prediction after taking into account neurocognitive preschool measures of letter naming, phonology, and verbal short-term memory. The association between infant brain responses and reading …

Maleevent-related potentialsspeech perceptionlukeminenDevelopmental psychologyDyslexiaBehavioral NeuroscienceCognition0302 clinical medicineReading (process)Longitudinal StudiesaivotutkimusChildEvoked PotentialsRapid automatized namingta515media_commoninfants05 social sciencesBrainElectroencephalographyCognitionChild PreschoolSpeech PerceptionFemalePsychologySpeech perceptionAdolescentCognitive Neurosciencemedia_common.quotation_subjectExperimental and Cognitive PsychologypitkittäistutkimusLanguage Development050105 experimental psychology03 medical and health scienceschildrenEvent-related potentialmedicineLearning to readHumansdysleksiaGenetic Predisposition to Disease0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesDyslexiaInfantmedicine.diseaseReadingpsykologiset testitlukutaitolukihäiriötNeurocognitive030217 neurology & neurosurgeryNeuropsychologia
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Foundation literacy acquisition in European orthographies

2003

Several previous studies have suggested that basic decoding skills may develop less effectively in English than in some other European orthographies. The origins of this effect in the early (foundation) phase of reading acquisition are investigated through assessments of letter knowledge, familiar word reading, and simple nonword reading in English and 12 other orthographies. The results confirm that children from a majority of European countries become accurate and fluent in foundation level reading before the end of the first school year. There are some exceptions, notably in French, Portuguese, Danish, and, particularly, in English. The effects appear not to be attributable to difference…

Malemedia_common.quotation_subjectLanguage DevelopmentLiteracyReading (process):Psychology [Social sciences]:Psicologia [Ciências sociais]HumansPsychologyChildRapid automatized namingGeneral Psychologymedia_commonLanguageEnglish orthographyOrthographic depthLinguisticsEuropeReadingPsicologiaSynthetic phonicsChild PreschoolEducational StatusFemaleSyllabic versePsychologyOrthography
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Cognitive Correlates of the Covariance in Reading and Arithmetic Fluency: Importance of Serial Retrieval Fluency

2019

This study examines the core predictors of the covariance in reading and arithmetic fluency and the domain-general cognitive skills that explain the core predictors and covariance. Seven-year-old Finnish children (N = 200) were assessed on rapid automatized naming (RAN), phonological awareness, letter knowledge, verbal counting, number writing, number comparison, memory skills, and processing and articulation speed in the spring of Grade 1 and on reading and arithmetic fluency in the fall of Grade 2. RAN and verbal counting were strongly associated, and a constructed latent factor, serial retrieval fluency (SRF), was the strongest unique predictor of the shared variance. Other unique predic…

Malemedia_common.quotation_subjectNeuropsychological TestsSerial Learning050105 experimental psychologyMemorizationEducationFluencyPhonological awarenessReading (process)ComputingMilieux_COMPUTERSANDEDUCATIONDevelopmental and Educational PsychologyHumans0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesCognitive skillArithmeticChildRapid automatized namingmedia_common05 social sciencesCognitionCovarianceReadingMental RecallPediatrics Perinatology and Child HealthFemalePsychologyMathematics050104 developmental & child psychologyChild Development
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Effects of bilingualism on white matter atrophy in mild cognitive impairment: a diffusion tensor imaging study

2020

Background and purpose Previous investigations show that bilinguals exhibit the first symptoms of dementia 4-5 years later than monolinguals. Therefore, bilingualism has been proposed as a cognitive reserve mechanism. Recent studies have advanced towards an understanding of the brain mechanisms underlying bilingualism's protection against dementia, but none of them deals with white matter (WM) diffusion. Methods In this study, the topic was investigated by measuring WM integrity in a sample of 35 bilinguals and 53 passive bilinguals with mild cognitive impairment. Results No significant differences were found between the groups in cognitive level, education, age or sex. However, bilinguals …

Malemedicine.medical_specialtyBilingualismMildcognitive impairmentMultilingualismAudiologyWhite matter03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineCognitive ReserveFractional anisotropymedicineHumansDementiaCingulum (brain)Cognitive Dysfunction030212 general & internal medicineAgedCognitive reservebusiness.industryFornixBrainmedicine.diseasebilingualism diffusion tensor imaging mild cognitive impairmentWhite MatterDiffusiontensor imagingDiffusion Tensor ImagingBoston Naming Testmedicine.anatomical_structureNeurologyAnisotropyFemaleNeurology (clinical)AtrophyNerve Netbusiness030217 neurology & neurosurgeryDiffusion MRIEuropean Journal of Neurology
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Functional relevant loss of long association fibre tracts integrity in early Alzheimer's disease.

2007

Abstract The aim of our study was to quantify the structural integrity of the long association fibre tracts in early Alzheimer's disease (AD) and to correlate the findings with the cognitive performance of the patients. We conducted region-of-interest-based analyses of color-coded diffusion-tensor imaging in 12 patients with early AD (age 69.8 ± 8.0 years; MMSE 25.3 ± 1.8) and 16 age- and education-matched healthy controls. Early AD patients showed significantly decreased fractional anisotropy (FA) of the cingulate bundles and the inferior fronto-occipital fascicles bilaterally, whereas FA values of the superior longitudinal fascicles (second division) did not differ significantly between p…

Malemedicine.medical_specialtyCognitive NeuroscienceExperimental and Cognitive PsychologyDiseaseAudiologyNeuropsychological TestsFunctional LateralityStatistics NonparametricBehavioral NeuroscienceAlzheimer DiseaseMemoryFractional anisotropyNeural PathwaysmedicineHumansEffects of sleep deprivation on cognitive performanceEpisodic memoryAgedBrain MappingNeuropsychologyStructural integrityBrainAssociation fibreMiddle AgedBoston Naming TestDiffusion Magnetic Resonance ImagingAnisotropyFemalePsychologyCognition DisordersNeuroscienceNeuropsychologia
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Reading and math abilities of Finnish school beginners born very preterm or with very low birth weight

2017

Reading and math skills of preterm born (birth weight 1500 g or gestational age:532 weeks) children and full term (FT) children were compared during the first weeks of grade 1. The participants were 194 preterm born and 175 FT children born between 2001 and 2006. There were more precocious readers among FT than among preterm students, but even the latter performed close to the national norm. FT and preterm group differences among non-readers were minor with only rapid naming showing a robust difference. Math performance showed a stable difference in favor of FT students and the difference was sustained in the full-scale IQcontrol. Major brain pathology increased the likelihood of poor schol…

NEUROBEHAVIORAL OUTCOMESSocial Psychology515 PsychologyBirth weightNEUROPSYCHOLOGICAL OUTCOMESeducationVery low birth weightAcademic achievement3124 Neurology and psychiatryEducationDevelopmental psychology03 medical and health sciencesPREREADING SKILLS0302 clinical medicine3123 Gynaecology and paediatrics030225 pediatricsACADEMIC-ACHIEVEMENTDevelopmental and Educational PsychologymedicineCognitive developmentVery Preterm Birthta516AUTOMATIZED NAMING RANta5154. Educationta118405 social sciences3112 Neurosciences050301 educationGestational agepreterm birthbirth weightLEARNING-DISABILITIESLow birth weightmath skillsCOGNITIVE-DEVELOPMENTLearning disabilityRISK-FACTORSGestationreading skillsschool readinessmedicine.symptomFOLLOW-UPPsychologyCHILDREN BORN0503 educationVery preterm birthLearning and Individual Differences
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Predictors of developmental dyslexia in European orthographies with varying complexity

2012

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 1,138 control and 1,114 dyslexic children speaking six 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…

Phonemic awareness4. Education05 social sciencesIndo-European languagesDyslexia050301 educationShort-term memoryPhonologymedicine.diseasebehavioral disciplines and activities050105 experimental psychologyDevelopmental psychologyPsychiatry and Mental healthPediatrics Perinatology and Child HealthDevelopmental and Educational PsychologyFinno-Ugric languagesmedicine0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesPsychology0503 educationRapid automatized namingOrthographyJournal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry
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Does the Relation between Rapid Automatized Naming and Reading Depend on Age or on Reading Level? A Behavioral and ERP Study

2018

Reading predictors evolve through age: phonological awareness is the best predictor of reading abilities at the beginning of reading acquisition while Rapid Automatized Naming (RAN) becomes the best reading predictor in more experienced readers (around 9–10 years old). Those developmental changes in the relationship between RAN and reading have so far been explained in term of participants' age. However, it should be noted that in the previous experiments age always co-vary with participants reading level. It is thus not clear whether RAN-reading relationship is developmental in nature or related to the reading system itself. This study investigates whether the behavioral changes in the rel…

Rapid automatized naming (RAN)Frenchmedia_common.quotation_subjectElectroencephalographyReading level050105 experimental psychologylcsh:RC321-571Developmental psychology03 medical and health sciencesBehavioral Neuroscience0302 clinical medicinechildrenddc:150Age groupsreadingPhonological awarenessReading (process)medicine0501 psychology and cognitive scienceslcsh:Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. NeuropsychiatryChildrenRapid automatized namingBiological PsychiatryOriginal Researchmedia_commonmedicine.diagnostic_test05 social sciencesChronological agePsychiatry and Mental healthNeuropsychology and Physiological PsychologyReadingNeurologyRanrapid automatized naming (RAN)PsychologyERP030217 neurology & neurosurgeryNeuroscienceFrontiers in Human Neuroscience
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Naming speed and Effortful and Automatic Inhibition in Children with Arithmetic Learning Disabilities

2009

Abstract We report a two-year longitudinal study aimed at investigating the rate of access to numerical and non-numerical information in long-term memory and the functioning of automatic and effortful cognitive inhibition processes in children with arithmetical learning disabilities (ALDs). Twelve children with ALDs, of age 9.3 years, and twelve gender–age-matched controls were involved in the study. Rate of access was measured through digit- and letter-naming tasks, automatic cognitive inhibition was measured using a negative priming paradigm, and effortful cognitive inhibition was measured rating intrusion errors in a working memory task. Children with ALDs suffered from a deficit in the …

Settore M-PSI/01 - Psicologia GeneraleLongitudinal studySocial PsychologyWorking memoryLong-term memoryShort-term memoryCognitionEducationSettore M-PSI/04 - Psicologia Dello Sviluppo E Psicologia Dell'EducazioneCognitive inhibitionLearning disabilityDevelopmental and Educational PsychologymedicineNegative primingmedicine.symptomPsychologyarithmetical learning disabilities mathematical disabilities naming speed negative priming working memory inhibitionCognitive psychology
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Predicting word-level reading fluency outcomes in three contrastive groups: Remedial and computer-assisted remedial reading intervention, and mainstr…

2010

Abstract The aim of the longitudinal intervention study was to build a model of predictive values of reading fluency in three contrastive reading groups: remedial and computer-assisted remedial reading intervention, and mainstream instruction, to identify the most effective type of intervention for children with different profiles of compromised pre-reading skills. The participants were 7-year-old Finnish school beginners ( N  = 166). Two remedial interventions took place in four weekly sessions of 45 min over a period of 28 weeks in Grade 1. For a child with deficits in the core pre-reading skills (letter knowledge, phonological awareness or rapid automatized naming), the computer-assisted…

Social Psychologymedia_common.quotation_subjectPsychological interventionComputer-Assisted InstructionEducationDevelopmental psychologyFluencyPhonological awarenessReading (process)Intervention (counseling)Developmental and Educational PsychologyPsychologyRemedial educationRapid automatized namingmedia_commonCognitive psychologyLearning and Individual Differences
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