Talk:Orthographies and dyslexia/Sandbox
Orthographies and dyslexia article · Talk page · Sandbox
A collection of Dyslexia and Orthography papers from NCBI
my collection of "Dyslexia and Orthography" papers from NCBI (pubmed) dolfrog (talk) 21:04, 27 July 2009 (UTC)
Bilingual and dyslexic in one language only
Wydell and
Research text requiring paraphrasing and copy-editing
Using both PET and fMRI, Paulescu et al. 2001, full paper both the abstract, and the final paragraph need paraphrasing to be included in the article [2]
A study comparing children's reading acquisition rates between different orthography of European Language (alphabet writing systems), Seymour et al. 2003, found that children from a majority of Europe Seymour et al abstract content could be paraphrased and used on
this could be an alternative "Becoming literate in different languages: similar problems, different solutions"
abstract only Only campares European or Latin writing system orthographies again more use on
logographic dyslexia
Although alphabetic dyslexia seems to originate in the left temporoparietal and occipitotemporal areas of the brain, recent studies indicate that logographic dyslexia is associated with part of the left middle frontal gyrus. This suggests that "the structural and functional basis for dyslexia varies between alphabetic and nonalphabetic languages.
FULL ABSTRACT or full article [5]
In other words, alphabetic and logographic dyslexia are most likely separate disorders; a person with alphabetic dyslexia would not necessarily also have logographic dyslexia, and vice versa.
The distinction between these two forms of dyslexia has led to promising therapeutic research. One study led by Alberto Sáez-Rodríguez discovered that syllabic logograms could act as a learning aid to alphabetic-dyslexic English-speaking children.[6]
Syllabic Writing
A syllabary is a set of written symbols that represent (or approximate) syllables, which make up words. A symbol in a syllabary typically represents an optional consonant sound followed by a vowel sound.
Languages using syllabaries
Languages that use syllabic writing include
New research papers
- Neural correlates of mapping from phonology to orthography in children performing an auditory spelling task PMID 17552934 a free PDF download, has some useful references to older research papers which may have have been part of a summary or review and relates very well to the present content / content to be improved. I also found this interesting link from publishers site
References
- ^
Wydell, Taeko Nakayama (1999-04-01). "A case study of an English-Japanese bilingual with monolingual dyslexia". Cognition. 70 (3): 273–305. doi:10.1016/S0010-0277(99)00016-5. Retrieved 2009-05-26.)
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- doi:10.1073/pnas.0801750105. Retrieved 2009-07-15.)
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suggested) (help - ^ Sáez-Rodríguez, Alberto (2009-05-08). "Use of syllabic logograms to help dyslexic readers of English visualize abstract words as pictures". Electronic Journal of Research in Educational Psychology. 7 (17): 25–48. Retrieved 2009-07-15.