Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://scholarbank.nus.edu.sg/handle/10635/228755
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dc.titleFrom Alien Zoo to Spy School: A Preregistered Study of Linguistic Sound Symbolism and its Links to Reading in 8-year-olds
dc.contributor.authorLaw, Evelyn Chung Ning
dc.date.accessioned2022-07-18T06:02:26Z
dc.date.available2022-07-18T06:02:26Z
dc.date.issued2021
dc.identifier.citationLaw, Evelyn Chung Ning (2021). From Alien Zoo to Spy School: A Preregistered Study of Linguistic Sound Symbolism and its Links to Reading in 8-year-olds. Annual Meeting of the Cognitive Science Society 43 : 2978-2984. ScholarBank@NUS Repository.
dc.identifier.issn10697977
dc.identifier.urihttps://scholarbank.nus.edu.sg/handle/10635/228755
dc.description.abstractAdults and children systematically match certain kinds of words to certain kinds of shapes according to the sounds of their phonemes (e.g., ‘kiki’-spiky ‘bouba’-curvy). These sound-shape mappings rely on multisensory processing of perceived goodness of fit between vision and audition. Dyslexic individuals have shown deficits in general multisensory processing and sound-symbolic matching suggesting that multisensory processing deficits may be developmentally implicated in early reading difficulties. A longitudinal cohort study tracking bilingual children in Singapore showed that early predictors of English reading at 4 years (e.g., phonological awareness, vocabulary size and letter knowledge) did not correlate with a novel child-friendly task eliciting the bouba-kiki effect at 6 years. However, since the children had not yet started formal reading instruction, it is difficult to interpret the lack of relationship. In the current study, we followed the same cohort of children into early reading years and tested their English word and pseudoword reading abilities at 8.5 years. In our preregistered analysis, no significant relationship was observed between earlier multisensory sound-shape matching reading outcomes but known predictors of reading showed strong relationships in this cohort of bilingual children.
dc.sourceElements
dc.typeConference Paper
dc.date.updated2022-07-15T15:13:42Z
dc.contributor.departmentPAEDIATRICS
dc.description.sourcetitleAnnual Meeting of the Cognitive Science Society
dc.description.volume43
dc.description.page2978-2984
dc.published.stateUnpublished
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