Alvarado Jesús M, Puente Aníbal, Herrera Valeria
Department of Methodology of Behavioral Sciences, Faculty of Psychology, Complutense University of Madrid, Spain.
Am Ann Deaf. 2008 Winter;152(5):467-79. doi: 10.1353/aad.2008.0009.
Deaf children can improve their reading skills by learning to use alternative, visual codes such as fingerspelling. A sample of 28 deaf children between the ages of 7 and 16 years was used as an experimental group and another sample of 15 hearing children of similar age and academic level as a control group. Two experiments were carried out to study the possible interactions between phonological and visual codes and working memory, and to understand the relationships between these codes and reading and orthographic achievement. The results highlight the relationship between dactylic and orthographic coding. Just as phoneme-to-grapheme knowledge can facilitate reading for hearing children, fingerspelling-to-grapheme knowledge has the potential to play a similar role for deaf readers.
失聪儿童可以通过学习使用诸如手指拼写等替代性视觉编码来提高他们的阅读技能。选取了28名年龄在7至16岁之间的失聪儿童作为实验组,另选取了15名年龄和学业水平相近的听力正常儿童作为对照组。进行了两项实验,以研究语音和视觉编码与工作记忆之间可能的相互作用,并了解这些编码与阅读及正字法成绩之间的关系。研究结果突出了手指拼写编码与正字法编码之间的关系。正如音素到字素的知识有助于听力正常儿童的阅读一样,手指拼写到字素的知识有可能对失聪读者起到类似的作用。