TY - JOUR
T1 - How do roots and suffixes influence reading of morphological pseudowords: A study of Italian children with dyslexia
AU - Traficante, Daniela
AU - Marcolini, Stefania
PY - 2011
Y1 - 2011
N2 - The study explored the different influences of roots and suffixes in reading aloud
morphemic pseudowords (e.g., vetr-ezza, ‘‘glass-ness’’). Previous work on adults
showed a facilitating effect of both roots and suffixes on naming times. In the
present study, pseudoword stimuli including roots and suffixes in different
combinations were administered to sixth-grade children with dyslexia (N=22)
and skilled readers (N=44), matched for chronological age. Indeed, the
sequential reading strategy of less proficient readers (particularly for pseudowords)
should favour the emergence of differences between left and right
constituents (root and suffix, respectively) in reading performance. Results
showed that for both children with dyslexia and skilled young readers the onset of
pronunciation depended exclusively on roots,while there was no significant effect
of suffixes. However, both roots and suffixes led to higher levels of accuracy than
matched orthographic strings of letters. Posthoc regression analyses confirmed
the morphological nature of the root and suffix effects, over and above the effects
of the frequency of their orthographic patterns. Results indicate that the position
of the reading units within the letter string, as well as their differential effects on
latencies and accuracy, should be taken into account by models of morphological
processing inword recognition and reading and by applied intervention research
AB - The study explored the different influences of roots and suffixes in reading aloud
morphemic pseudowords (e.g., vetr-ezza, ‘‘glass-ness’’). Previous work on adults
showed a facilitating effect of both roots and suffixes on naming times. In the
present study, pseudoword stimuli including roots and suffixes in different
combinations were administered to sixth-grade children with dyslexia (N=22)
and skilled readers (N=44), matched for chronological age. Indeed, the
sequential reading strategy of less proficient readers (particularly for pseudowords)
should favour the emergence of differences between left and right
constituents (root and suffix, respectively) in reading performance. Results
showed that for both children with dyslexia and skilled young readers the onset of
pronunciation depended exclusively on roots,while there was no significant effect
of suffixes. However, both roots and suffixes led to higher levels of accuracy than
matched orthographic strings of letters. Posthoc regression analyses confirmed
the morphological nature of the root and suffix effects, over and above the effects
of the frequency of their orthographic patterns. Results indicate that the position
of the reading units within the letter string, as well as their differential effects on
latencies and accuracy, should be taken into account by models of morphological
processing inword recognition and reading and by applied intervention research
KW - Dyslexia
KW - Morphology
KW - Reading
KW - Dyslexia
KW - Morphology
KW - Reading
UR - http://hdl.handle.net/10807/1903
UR - http://search.proquest.com/docview/883436053?accountid=9941
U2 - 10.1080/01690965.2010.496553
DO - 10.1080/01690965.2010.496553
M3 - Article
SN - 0169-0965
VL - 26
SP - 777
EP - 793
JO - Language and Cognitive Processes
JF - Language and Cognitive Processes
ER -