The overall goal of the research program is to understand how the language apparatus, biologically specialized for speaking and listening, becomes adapted to reading and writing. Projects I and II explore the bases of phonology. Project I is concerned with the nature and function of the biological specialization (the speech mode) and with its early development (including cerebral lateralization): the central hypotheses addressed by its experiments are that the basic unit of both perception and production is the gesture, and that the phoneme (the basis of the alphabet) gradually emerges in development from recurrent patterns of sound and gesture. Project II principally examines how gestures are organized into syllables, how complex acoustic changes associated with shifts in speaking style arise from relatively simple gestural changes, and how listeners parse the acoustic signal into acoustic constellations the components of which are the consequence of a single gesture. The next three projects study the dependence of reading on the phonological processes of speaking and listening. Project III tests the view that deficits in phonological representation limit the development of phonological awareness and success in learning to read and spell. Project IV draws on both good and poor readers, and on several different writing systems (Serbo-Croatian, English, Hebrew, Chinese) to study the mechanism by which readers relate the written word to its spoken form. Project V seeks to identify the sources of difficulties in reading at the sentence level and to forward the goal of early identification of children likely to develop reading problems; a central hypothesis of this project is that poor readers' comprehension difficulties reflect a bottleneck in phonological processing rather than a lag in the mastery of certain syntactic structures.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health & Human Development (NICHD)
Type
Research Program Projects (P01)
Project #
5P01HD001994-29
Application #
2194780
Study Section
Maternal and Child Health Research Committee (HDMC)
Project Start
1976-02-01
Project End
1996-01-31
Budget Start
1994-02-01
Budget End
1995-01-31
Support Year
29
Fiscal Year
1994
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
Haskins Laboratories, Inc.
Department
Type
DUNS #
060010147
City
New Haven
State
CT
Country
United States
Zip Code
06511
Ryherd, K; Jasinska, K; Van Dyke, J A et al. (2018) Cortical regions supporting reading comprehension skill for single words and discourse. Brain Lang 186:32-43
Patael, Smadar Z; Farris, Emily A; Black, Jessica M et al. (2018) Brain basis of cognitive resilience: Prefrontal cortex predicts better reading comprehension in relation to decoding. PLoS One 13:e0198791
Landi, Nicole; Malins, Jeffrey G; Frost, Stephen J et al. (2018) Neural representations for newly learned words are modulated by overnight consolidation, reading skill, and age. Neuropsychologia 111:133-144
Hong, Tian; Shuai, Lan; Frost, Stephen J et al. (2018) Cortical Responses to Chinese Phonemes in Preschoolers Predict Their Literacy Skills at School Age. Dev Neuropsychol 43:356-369
Siegelman, Noam; Bogaerts, Louisa; Kronenfeld, Ofer et al. (2018) Redefining ""Learning"" in Statistical Learning: What Does an Online Measure Reveal About the Assimilation of Visual Regularities? Cogn Sci 42 Suppl 3:692-727
Olmstead, Annie J; Viswanathan, Navin (2018) Lexical exposure to native language dialects can improve non-native phonetic discrimination. Psychon Bull Rev 25:725-731
Hendren, Robert L; Haft, Stephanie L; Black, Jessica M et al. (2018) Recognizing Psychiatric Comorbidity With Reading Disorders. Front Psychiatry 9:101
Chyl, Katarzyna; Kossowski, Bartosz; D?bska, Agnieszka et al. (2018) Prereader to beginning reader: changes induced by reading acquisition in print and speech brain networks. J Child Psychol Psychiatry 59:76-87
Johns, Clinton L; Jahn, Andrew A; Jones, Hannah R et al. (2018) Individual differences in decoding skill, print exposure, and cortical structure in young adults. Lang Cogn Neurosci 33:1275-1295
Del Tufo, Stephanie N; Frost, Stephen J; Hoeft, Fumiko et al. (2018) Neurochemistry Predicts Convergence of Written and Spoken Language: A Proton Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy Study of Cross-Modal Language Integration. Front Psychol 9:1507

Showing the most recent 10 out of 457 publications