Letter and Word Processing in Developmental Dyslexia: Evidence from a Two-Alternative Forced Choice Task

Daniela Traficante, Pierluigi Zoccolotti, Chiara Valeria Marinelli

Risultato della ricerca: Contributo in rivistaArticolopeer review

Abstract

Background/Objectives: The present study aimed to investigate letter processing in children with dyslexia and typically developing readers as a function of the type of orthographic context. Methods and Results: In Experiment 1A, children performed a two-alternative forced choice task (Reicher–Wheeler paradigm) using as probes either high-frequency words, pronounceable pseudo-words, or unpronounceable non-words. The\r\ngroup differences in letter recognition were clearly distinguished from those present in typical word and pseudo-word reading conditions (Experiment 1B), as a global factor was present only in the latter case. In Experiment 2, the two-alternative forced choice task required the child to search for the target letter in the subsequent multi-letter string (i.e., words, pseudo-words, or non-words), thus reducing the memory load. Detecting the target\r\nletter was more difficult in a word than in a pseudo-word or non-word array, indicating that the word form’s lexical activation interfered with the target’s analysis in both groups of children. In Experiment 3, children performed the two-alternative forced choice task with symbols (Greek letters) either in the Reicher–Wheeler mode of presentation (Experiment 3A) or in the search condition (Experiment 3B). Children with dyslexia performed identically to\r\ntypically developing readers in keeping with the selectivity of their orthographic difficulties.\r\nConclusions: The present data indicate that children with dyslexia suffer from an early deficit in making perceptual operations that require the conjunction analysis of a set of letters. Still, this deficit is not due to an inability to scan the letter string. The deficit is confined to orthographic stimuli and does not extend to other types of visual targets.
Lingua originaleInglese
pagine (da-a)1-28
Numero di pagine28
RivistaChildren
Volume12
Numero di pubblicazione5
DOI
Stato di pubblicazionePubblicato - 2025

Keywords

  • Reicher–Wheeler paradigm
  • developmental dyslexia
  • visuo-orthographic processes

Fingerprint

Entra nei temi di ricerca di 'Letter and Word Processing in Developmental Dyslexia: Evidence from a Two-Alternative Forced Choice Task'. Insieme formano una fingerprint unica.

Cita questo