We studied the role of semantic and morpho-orthographic information in word naming, by using Italian alterate forms. Thirty-two children with dyslexia and 64 same-age skilled readers (mean age: 134 months) were requested to read alterate nouns (e.g. librone, big book), fully parsable pseudo-alterate nouns (e.g. mattone, brick) and simple nouns ending with a pseudo-suffix (e.g. carbone, coal). Alterate nouns are read faster than simple words, while no difference emerged between the two types of simple words. Data are in favour of a dual-route access to morphologically complex words based on both whole word and morphemic constituents, linked to semantic representations.
Traficante, D., Marelli, M., Luzzatti, C., Is a brick (mattone) a big mad (matto)? What can alterate forms in Italian tell us about morphological parsing in children with dyslexia and skilled readers, Poster, in B.D.A. 8th International Conference, Dyslexia: Beyond Boundaries, (Harrogate (UK), 02-04 June 2011), Organizing Commettee, Harrogate 2011: 1-1 [http://hdl.handle.net/10807/61710]
Is a brick (mattone) a big mad (matto)? What can alterate forms in Italian tell us about morphological parsing in children with dyslexia and skilled readers
Traficante, Daniela;
2011
Abstract
We studied the role of semantic and morpho-orthographic information in word naming, by using Italian alterate forms. Thirty-two children with dyslexia and 64 same-age skilled readers (mean age: 134 months) were requested to read alterate nouns (e.g. librone, big book), fully parsable pseudo-alterate nouns (e.g. mattone, brick) and simple nouns ending with a pseudo-suffix (e.g. carbone, coal). Alterate nouns are read faster than simple words, while no difference emerged between the two types of simple words. Data are in favour of a dual-route access to morphologically complex words based on both whole word and morphemic constituents, linked to semantic representations.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.