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The objective of the present study was to examine the contribution of lexical and nonlexical processes to skilled reading
and spelling in Persian. Persian is a mixed orthography that allows one to study within one language characteristics typically
found in shallow orthographies as well as those found in deeper orthographies. 61 senior high-school students (mean age = 17;
8, SD = 4 months) attending schools in Iran were tested on reading and spelling of words and nonwords. The word stimuli differed
in terms of reading transparency (transparent when all phonemes have corresponding letters vs. opaque when short vowels were
not marked with a letter) and spelling polygraphy (nonpolygraphic phonemes vs. polygraphic phonemes). The nonwords were transparent
and nonpolygraphic. The reading results showed that both transparent and opaque words were read faster than nonwords, and
that transparent words were read faster than opaque words. Moreover, both transparent and opaque words were affected by word
frequency. These findings suggest that skilled readers of Persian relied on lexical processes to read words. In contrast,
the spelling results failed to show a word-advantage effect suggesting that skilled spellers of Persian rely on nonlexical
processes to spell words. Moreover, orthographic complexity also affected spelling. Specifically, nonpolygraphic words were
spelled faster than polygraphic words for both transparent and opaque words. Taken together, the findings showed that skilled
reading and spelling in Persian rely on different underlying processes. 相似文献
2.
The main objective of the present study was to examine the contribution of phonological and orthographic skills to Persian
reading and spelling. The Persian language is of interest because it has very consistent grapheme-to-phoneme correspondences,
but somewhat inconsistent phoneme-to-grapheme correspondences. Reading, spelling, phonological, and orthographic skills were
tested in a sample of 109 monolingual Persian students (mean age = 8;1, SD = 4 mo) attending Grade 2 in Iran. The results
showed that although monolingual Persian children relied both on phonological and orthographic skills, phonological skills
were a strong predictor for both reading and spelling. Another objective of the study was to compare children’s spelling performance
in terms of phoneme-to-grapheme (PG) consistencies. As expected, children spelled PG-consistent words more accurately than
PG-inconsistent words. Moreover, they relied more on orthographic skills for spelling PG-inconsistent words than for spelling
PG-consistent words. The results are discussed in terms of the differential effect of orthographic consistency on reading
and spelling. 相似文献
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