Literature DB >> 7140425

Reading disabilities: the case of Chinese, Japanese, and English.

H W Stevenson, J W Stigler, G W Lucker, S Lee, C Hsu, S Kitamura.   

Abstract

A common hypothesis has considered apparent differences in the incidence of reading disability in Asian and Western languages to be related to orthographic factors. A reading test was constructed in English, Japanese, and Chinese to assess the validity of this proposal. Large samples of fifth-grade children in Japan, Taiwan, and the United States were given the test and a battery of 10 cognitive tasks. Strong evidence was found that reading disabilities exist among Chinese and Japanese as well as among American children. In discriminating between groups of poor and average readers by means of the cognitive tasks, the combined effects of general information and verbal memory proved to be the most powerful predictors in Japan and Taiwan. General information and coding emerged as the most effective predictors for American children. The results cast doubt upon the crucial significance of orthography as the major factor determining the incidence of reading disabilities across cultures.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  1982        PMID: 7140425

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Child Dev        ISSN: 0009-3920


  18 in total

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2.  What does accessing a morphemic script tell us about reading and reading disorders in an alphabetic script?

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4.  Testing the interdependence hypothesis among native adult bilingual Russian-English students.

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Journal:  World J Pediatr       Date:  2022-06-27       Impact factor: 2.764

6.  Evidence for and characteristics of Dyslexia among Japanese children.

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7.  Longitudinal prediction and prevention of early reading difficulty.

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8.  Association of the DYX1C1 dyslexia susceptibility gene with orthography in the Chinese population.

Authors:  Yuping Zhang; Jun Li; Twila Tardif; Margit Burmeister; Sandra M Villafuerte; Catherine McBride-Chang; Hong Li; Bingjie Shi; Weilan Liang; Zhixiang Zhang; Hua Shu
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9.  Cognitive skills and literacy performance of Chinese adolescents with and without dyslexia.

Authors:  Kevin K H Chung; Connie S-H Ho; David W Chan; Suk-Man Tsang; Suk-Han Lee
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10.  Prevalence and associated risk factors of dyslexic children in a middle-sized city of China: a cross-sectional study.

Authors:  Zhao Sun; Li Zou; Jiajia Zhang; Shengnan Mo; Shanshan Shao; Rong Zhong; Juntao Ke; Xuzai Lu; Xiaoping Miao; Ranran Song
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