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Are French dyslexic children sensitive to consonant sonority in segmentation strategies? Preliminary evidence from a letter detection task.
Maïonchi-Pino, Norbert; de Cara, Bruno; Écalle, Jean; Magnan, Annie.
Afiliación
  • Maïonchi-Pino N; Laboratoire d'Étude des Mécanismes Cognitifs, EA 3082/Université Lyon 2, Bron, France. norbert.mp@idac.tohoku.ac.jp
Res Dev Disabil ; 33(1): 12-23, 2012.
Article en En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22093643
ABSTRACT
This paper aims to investigate whether--and how--consonant sonority (obstruent vs. sonorant) and status (coda vs. onset) within syllable boundaries modulate the syllable-based segmentation strategies. Here, it is questioned whether French dyslexic children, who experience acoustic-phonetic (i.e., voicing) and phonological impairments, are sensitive to an optimal 'sonorant coda-obstruent onset' sonority profile as a cue for a syllable-based segmentation. To examine these questions, we used a modified version of the illusory conjunction paradigm with French dyslexic children compared with both chronological age-matched and reading level-matched controls. Our results first showed that the syllable-based segmentation is developmentally constrained in visual identification in normally reading children, it appears to progressively increase as reading skills increase. However, surprisingly, our results also showed that dyslexic children were able to use syllable-sized units. Then, data highlighted that a syllable-based segmentation in visual identification basically relies on an optimal 'sonorant coda-obstruent onset' sonority profile rather than on phonological and orthographic statistical properties in normally reading children as well as, surprisingly, in dyslexic children. Our results are discussed to support a sonority-modulated prelexical role of syllable-sized units in visual identification in French, even in dyslexic children who exhibited a developmentally delayed profile. We argue that dyslexic children have deficits in online phonetic-phonological processing rather than degraded or underspecified phonetic-phonological representations.
Asunto(s)

Texto completo: 1 Colección: 01-internacional Base de datos: MEDLINE Asunto principal: Lectura / Dislexia Tipo de estudio: Diagnostic_studies / Prognostic_studies Límite: Child / Humans País/Región como asunto: Europa Idioma: En Revista: Res Dev Disabil Asunto de la revista: TRANSTORNOS MENTAIS Año: 2012 Tipo del documento: Article País de afiliación: Francia

Texto completo: 1 Colección: 01-internacional Base de datos: MEDLINE Asunto principal: Lectura / Dislexia Tipo de estudio: Diagnostic_studies / Prognostic_studies Límite: Child / Humans País/Región como asunto: Europa Idioma: En Revista: Res Dev Disabil Asunto de la revista: TRANSTORNOS MENTAIS Año: 2012 Tipo del documento: Article País de afiliación: Francia
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