Contingency-testing in the use of the sentence acceptability task by Ho (2019) in understanding dyslexia in Singapore : an EEG study

Morphological awareness is known to explain variance in word reading and reading comprehension within groups of people with reading difficulties and those who have typical reading ability. It has been argued to be particularly vital in reading Chinese, where differences in meaning can arise from int...

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Main Author: Tan, Priscilla Le En
Other Authors: Francis C. K. Wong
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: Nanyang Technological University 2020
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/138334
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1383342020-05-02T11:48:26Z Contingency-testing in the use of the sentence acceptability task by Ho (2019) in understanding dyslexia in Singapore : an EEG study Tan, Priscilla Le En Francis C. K. Wong School of Humanities franciswong@ntu.edu.sg Humanities::Linguistics::Neurolinguistics Humanities::Linguistics::Psycholinguistics Morphological awareness is known to explain variance in word reading and reading comprehension within groups of people with reading difficulties and those who have typical reading ability. It has been argued to be particularly vital in reading Chinese, where differences in meaning can arise from intra-word (that is, constituent character) manipulation. This present study investigated the robustness of Ho (2019)’s Sentence Acceptability Task in investigating morphological processing performance and the N400 component in children with Chinese language-specific dyslexia in comparison with non-dyslexic adults using electroencephalography (EEG). 25 English-Chinese bilinguals of different Chinese proficiency levels were recruited into the present study and compared with Ho (2019)’s child dataset. Despite such apparent dissimilarity, no main effect of either task experimental condition or participant group across reaction time, accuracy and mean N400 amplitude was found, calling the Sentence Acceptability Task’s robustness into question. Within-groups comparisons revealed no significant differences within the child dataset, but a main effect of location (anteriority/posteriority) on N400 amplitude was found within the adult sample. Curiously, an inverse relationship between proficiency and N400 amplitude was observed across adult Chinese proficiency levels, where other studies have found the opposite. Nevertheless, alternative explanations for lack of significant main and interaction effects, such as children forming response strategies and development-related changes to the N400 component are offered, suggestions for further refinement of the Sentence Acceptability Task are made, and future directions of this line of research are discussed. Bachelor of Arts in Linguistics and Multilingual Studies 2020-05-02T11:48:26Z 2020-05-02T11:48:26Z 2020 Final Year Project (FYP) https://hdl.handle.net/10356/138334 en application/pdf Nanyang Technological University
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
country Singapore
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Humanities::Linguistics::Neurolinguistics
Humanities::Linguistics::Psycholinguistics
spellingShingle Humanities::Linguistics::Neurolinguistics
Humanities::Linguistics::Psycholinguistics
Tan, Priscilla Le En
Contingency-testing in the use of the sentence acceptability task by Ho (2019) in understanding dyslexia in Singapore : an EEG study
description Morphological awareness is known to explain variance in word reading and reading comprehension within groups of people with reading difficulties and those who have typical reading ability. It has been argued to be particularly vital in reading Chinese, where differences in meaning can arise from intra-word (that is, constituent character) manipulation. This present study investigated the robustness of Ho (2019)’s Sentence Acceptability Task in investigating morphological processing performance and the N400 component in children with Chinese language-specific dyslexia in comparison with non-dyslexic adults using electroencephalography (EEG). 25 English-Chinese bilinguals of different Chinese proficiency levels were recruited into the present study and compared with Ho (2019)’s child dataset. Despite such apparent dissimilarity, no main effect of either task experimental condition or participant group across reaction time, accuracy and mean N400 amplitude was found, calling the Sentence Acceptability Task’s robustness into question. Within-groups comparisons revealed no significant differences within the child dataset, but a main effect of location (anteriority/posteriority) on N400 amplitude was found within the adult sample. Curiously, an inverse relationship between proficiency and N400 amplitude was observed across adult Chinese proficiency levels, where other studies have found the opposite. Nevertheless, alternative explanations for lack of significant main and interaction effects, such as children forming response strategies and development-related changes to the N400 component are offered, suggestions for further refinement of the Sentence Acceptability Task are made, and future directions of this line of research are discussed.
author2 Francis C. K. Wong
author_facet Francis C. K. Wong
Tan, Priscilla Le En
format Final Year Project
author Tan, Priscilla Le En
author_sort Tan, Priscilla Le En
title Contingency-testing in the use of the sentence acceptability task by Ho (2019) in understanding dyslexia in Singapore : an EEG study
title_short Contingency-testing in the use of the sentence acceptability task by Ho (2019) in understanding dyslexia in Singapore : an EEG study
title_full Contingency-testing in the use of the sentence acceptability task by Ho (2019) in understanding dyslexia in Singapore : an EEG study
title_fullStr Contingency-testing in the use of the sentence acceptability task by Ho (2019) in understanding dyslexia in Singapore : an EEG study
title_full_unstemmed Contingency-testing in the use of the sentence acceptability task by Ho (2019) in understanding dyslexia in Singapore : an EEG study
title_sort contingency-testing in the use of the sentence acceptability task by ho (2019) in understanding dyslexia in singapore : an eeg study
publisher Nanyang Technological University
publishDate 2020
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/138334
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