Katz R B
Department of Neurology, Boston University School of Medicine.
Brain Lang. 1989 Aug;37(2):201-19. doi: 10.1016/0093-934x(89)90015-1.
Some investigators have suggested that recognizing orally spelled words is dependent on the same procedures ordinarily used in spelling, whereas others have viewed it either as dependent on reading procedures or as an independent ability. In the present study, a single subject with dyslexia and dysgraphia was examined on parallel tests of recognizing orally spelled words, reading, and spelling (writing), and a comparison was made of his performance on the three tasks. On both words and nonwords, the patient's errors in recognizing orally spelled words and in reading were alike, whereas his spelling errors were often different. The distinction between recognizing orally spelled words and spelling was further shown by his inability to recognize a set of orally spelled words that he could write correctly to dictation or on the basis of word meaning. These findings suggest that the procedures normally used for reading can accept sequences of letter identities as input when orally spelled words must be recognized.
一些研究者认为,识别口头拼写的单词依赖于通常用于拼写的相同程序,而另一些人则认为它要么依赖于阅读程序,要么是一种独立的能力。在本研究中,对一名患有诵读困难和书写困难的单一受试者进行了口头拼写单词识别、阅读和拼写(书写)的平行测试,并比较了他在这三项任务上的表现。无论是对单词还是非单词,该患者在识别口头拼写单词和阅读时的错误是相似的,而他的拼写错误往往不同。他无法识别一组他能够根据听写或单词意思正确书写的口头拼写单词,这进一步表明了识别口头拼写单词和拼写之间的区别。这些发现表明,当必须识别口头拼写的单词时,通常用于阅读的程序可以将字母序列作为输入接受。