Lexical-semantic reading in a shallow orthography: Evidence from a girl with Williams syndrome.

The reading skills of a girl with Williams Syndrome are assessed by a timed word-naming task. To test the efficiency of lexical and nonlexical reading, we considered four marker effects: Lexicality (better reading of words than nonwords), frequency (better reading of high than low frequency words), length (better reading of short than long words), and contextuality (better reading of words with one-to-one grapheme-to-phoneme mapping than words with context-sensitive graphemes). Results suggested that this girl has failed to develop efficient orthography-to-phonology mappings and is dependent upon a lexical-semantic reading procedure in which a word’s pronunciation is activated after its meaning is obtained.

Publication type: 
Articolo
Author or Creator: 
Barca
L.
Bello
A.
Volterra
V.
Burani
C.
Publisher: 
Kluwer Academic Publishers, Dordrecht ;, Paesi Bassi
Source: 
Reading & writing 23 (2010): 569–588.
info:cnr-pdr/source/autori:Barca, L., Bello, A., Volterra, V., & Burani, C./titolo:Lexical-semantic reading in a shallow orthography: Evidence from a girl with Williams syndrome./doi:/rivista:Reading & writing/anno:2010/pagina_da:569/pagina_a:588/interval
Date: 
2010
Resource Identifier: 
http://www.cnr.it/prodotto/i/47141
ISTC Author: 
Virginia Volterra's picture
Real name: 
Laura Barca's picture
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