Search results for "READING"

showing 10 items of 1521 documents

Early phonological skills as a predictor of reading acquisition: a follow-up study from kindergarten to the middle of grade 2.

2003

The purpose of this study was to investigate the power of early measures of phonological skills (phonemic awareness, rapid naming, short-term memory) in predicting later reading skills at various points of time. About 70 children were followed from the end of kindergarten to the middle of grade 2. Correlation analyses were performed as well as a linear growth curve analyses. In the traditional regression analysis, phonemic awareness in kindergarten explained about 27% of the variance in word reading six months later and about 9.5% of the variance at the end of grade 1. Even when prior level of reading skill was included in the predictive equation, a significant amount of variance was still …

Malemedia_common.quotation_subjectDevelopmental psychologyCorrelationArts and Humanities (miscellaneous)PhoneticsPredictive Value of TestsReading (process)Developmental and Educational PsychologyHumansLearningSpeechChildGeneral Psychologymedia_commonLanguage TestsPhonemic awarenessPhoneticsRegression analysisGeneral MedicineVariance (accounting)AwarenessMemory Short-TermReadingChild PreschoolPredictive powerFemalePsychologySentenceFollow-Up StudiesScandinavian journal of psychology
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Theories of Intelligence in Children with Reading Disabilities: A Training Proposal

2005

A recent trend in the study of reading difficulties promotes multidimensional intervention, focusing on the reciprocal influences exerted by cognitive and emotional-motivational variables. This study evaluated improvements in reading performance as a function of metacognitive training in 36 children ( M age = 8.7 yr.) with different representations of intelligence. Posttest evaluations show significantly more improvement in reading comprehension in children with an incremental theory of intelligence. These results indicate the importance of treatment programmes that take into account both the specificity of deficits and factors relating to the domain of motivation.

Malemedia_common.quotation_subjectIntelligenceMetacognition050109 social psychologyDevelopmental psychologyDyslexiaSettore M-PSI/04 - Psicologia Dello Sviluppo E Psicologia Dell'EducazioneIntervention (counseling)Reading (process)Psychological TheoryHumansRemedial Teaching0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesChildFunction (engineering)General Psychologymedia_commonMotivationchildren reading disabilitiesCognitive Behavioral Therapy05 social sciences050301 educationCognitionReading comprehensionFemalePsychological TheoryPsychology0503 educationReciprocalCognitive psychologyPsychological Reports
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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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Event-related potentials to tones show differences between children with multiple risk factors for dyslexia and control children before the onset of …

2015

Multiple risk factors can affect the development of specific reading problems or dyslexia. In addition to the most prevalent and studied risk factor, phonological processing, also auditory discrimination problems have been found in children and adults with reading difficulties. The present study examined 37 children between the ages of 5 and 6, 11 of which had multiple risk factors for developing reading problems. The children participated in a passive oddball EEG experiment with sinusoidal sounds with changes in sound frequency, duration, or intensity. The responses to the standard stimuli showed a negative voltage shift in children at risk for reading problems compared to control children…

Malemedia_common.quotation_subjectMismatch negativityContingent Negative VariationElectroencephalographyAffect (psychology)event-related potentialsStatistics NonparametricpreschoolDevelopmental psychologychildrenEvent-related potentialRisk FactorsPhysiology (medical)Reading (process)dyslexiamedicineReaction TimeHumansdysleksiaEEGRisk factor10. No inequalityChildta515auditory processingmedia_commonmedicine.diagnostic_testGeneral NeuroscienceDyslexiaWechsler ScalesElectroencephalographyVerbal Learningmedicine.diseaseesikouluNeuropsychology and Physiological PsychologyMemory Short-TermSoundAcoustic StimulationDuration (music)Child PreschoolAuditory PerceptionEvoked Potentials Auditorymismatch negativityFemalePsychologypoikkeavuusnegatiivisuusN250International Journal of Psychophysiology
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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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Do fatty acids help in overcoming reading difficulties? A double-blind, placebo-controlled study of the effects of eicosapentaenoic acid and carnosin…

2008

Background  There are claims that dietary supplementation of unsaturated fatty acids could help children with dyslexia to overcome their reading problems. However, these claims have not yet been empirically tested. Methods  This study was designed to test whether dietary supplementation was superior to placebo in treating reading, spelling or other reading-related skills of children with dyslexia. The experimental group (eicosapentaenoic acid, EPA, n = 30) ate dietary supplements and the control group (placebo, n = 31) placebos during the 90-day treatment period. The supplements contained omega-3 fatty acid (ethyl-EPA, 500 mg/day) and carnosine (400 mg/day). The groups were matched for read…

Malemedia_common.quotation_subjectPlacebo-controlled studyPlaceboDevelopmental psychologyDyslexiaDouble-Blind MethodReading (process)Developmental and Educational PsychologymedicineHumansChildFinlandmedia_commonchemistry.chemical_classificationCarnosinePublic Health Environmental and Occupational HealthDyslexiaFatty acidmedicine.diseaseEicosapentaenoic acidCombined Modality TherapySpellingTreatment OutcomechemistryEicosapentaenoic AcidCase-Control StudiesPediatrics Perinatology and Child HealthLearning disabilityDietary SupplementsFemalemedicine.symptomPsychologyClinical psychologyChild: care, health and development
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What makes working memory spans so predictive of high-level cognition?

2005

Working memory (WM) span tasks involving a complex activity performed concurrently with item retention have proven to be good predictors of high-level cognitive performance. The present study demonstrates that replacing these complex self-paced activities with simpler but computer-paced processes, such as reading successive letters, yields more predictive WM span measures. This finding suggests that WM span tasks evaluate a fundamental capacity that underpins complex as well as elementary cognitive processes. Moreover, the higher predictive power of computer-paced WM span tasks suggests that strategic factors do not contribute to the relationship between WM spans and high-level cognition.

Malemedia_common.quotation_subjectStatistics as TopicShort-term memoryAptitudeExperimental and Cognitive PsychologyAttention spanVocabularyArts and Humanities (miscellaneous)Reading (process)Developmental and Educational PsychologyMemory spanReaction TimeHumansAttentionEffects of sleep deprivation on cognitive performanceChildProblem Solvingmedia_commonWorking memoryCognitionVerbal LearningMemory Short-TermReadingPredictive powerEducational StatusFemalePsychologyCognitive psychologyPsychonomic bulletinreview
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Personal conceptions of intelligence affect outcome in a multimedia reading training program.

2008

Personal conceptions of intelligence seem to make a significant contribution to overcoming a reading deficit, as indicated in our earlier research. The present aim was to assess improvements in reading-decoding following training of children with reading-decoding problems and different conceptions of intelligence (incremental or entity). It was expected that treatment of children with an incremental representation would improve more. Participants were 20 children (10 girls, 10 boys) whose average age was 8.6 yr., who attended Grade 3 of elementary school, and who were selected from 675 pupils. Children were given a multimedia test to measure motivational factors such as conceptions of inte…

Malemedia_common.quotation_subjectTeaching methodeducationIntelligenceExperimental and Cognitive PsychologySample (statistics)Affect (psychology)computer.software_genreOutcome (game theory)Developmental psychologySettore M-PSI/04 - Psicologia Dello Sviluppo E Psicologia Dell'EducazioneReading (process)PerceptionHumansmedia_commonMotivationtrainingMultimediaTeachingSensory SystemsTest (assessment)AffectMultimediaReadingFemaleAttributionPsychologycomputerPerceptual and motor skills
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The left occipitotemporal system in reading: disruption of focal fMRI connectivity to left inferior frontal and inferior parietal language areas in c…

2011

Developmental dyslexia is a severe reading disorder, which is characterized by dysfluent reading and impaired automaticity of visual word processing. Adults with dyslexia show functional deficits in several brain regions including the so-called "Visual Word Form Area" (VWFA), which is implicated in visual word processing and located within the larger left occipitotemporal VWF-System. The present study examines functional connections of the left occipitotemporal VWF-System with other major language areas in children with dyslexia. Functional connectivity MRI was used to assess connectivity of the VWF-System in 18 children with dyslexia and 24 age-matched controls (age 9.7-12.5 years) using f…

Malemedicine.medical_specialtyCognitive Neurosciencemedia_common.quotation_subjectWord processingAutomaticityAudiologyNeuropsychological TestsBrain mappingFunctional LateralityDyslexiaReading (process)mental disordersNeural PathwaysmedicineImage Processing Computer-AssistedReaction TimeHumansFunctional disconnectionVisual word form areaVisual WordChildmedia_commonLanguageBrain MappingDyslexiamedicine.diseaseMagnetic Resonance ImagingTemporal LobeNeurologyReadingData Interpretation StatisticalFemaleOccipital LobePsychologyPhotic StimulationPsychomotor PerformanceCognitive psychologyNeuroImage
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Fixation-related potentials in naming speed: A combined EEG and eye-tracking study on children with dyslexia.

2021

Abstract Objective We combined electroencephalography (EEG) and eye-tracking recordings to examine the underlying factors elicited during the serial Rapid-Automatized Naming (RAN) task that may differentiate between children with dyslexia (DYS) and chronological age controls (CAC). Methods Thirty children with DYS and 30 CAC (Mage = 9.79 years; age range 7.6 through 12.1 years) performed a set of serial RAN tasks. We extracted fixation-related potentials (FRPs) under phonologically similar (rime-confound) or visually similar (resembling lowercase letters) and dissimilar (non-confounding and discrete uppercase letters, respectively) control tasks. Results Results revealed significant differe…

Malemedicine.medical_specialtyEye MovementsElectroencephalographyAudiologyDyslexiaPhysiology (medical)medicineReaction TimedysleksiaHumansEEGSet (psychology)ChildEye-Tracking Technologyeye-trackingmedicine.diagnostic_testDyslexiaFixation-Related PotentialsElectroencephalographyNeurophysiologymedicine.diseaseSensory SystemsRANNeurologyReadingpsykologiset testitFixation (visual)RankatseenseurantaEye trackingFemaleNeurology (clinical)PsychologyNeurocognitivePhotic StimulationClinical neurophysiology : official journal of the International Federation of Clinical Neurophysiology
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