RAN Is Not a Measure of Orthographic Processing. Evidence From the Asymmetric German Orthography
- 12 February 2009
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Scientific Studies of Reading
- Vol. 13 (1), 1-25
- https://doi.org/10.1080/10888430802631684
Abstract
In three large samples (N = 1248) of children learning to read German we investigated the correlations between rapid automatized naming (RAN), phonological awareness (PA), phonological decoding (nonword reading fluency), and orthographic processing (word reading fluency and spelling). In a series of hierarchical regression analyses, RAN explained more variance in word and nonword reading fluency than PA, whereas PA explained more variance in spelling than RAN. This pattern was confirmed when PA response times were assessed instead of response accuracy. Two further regression models challenge the view that the RAN-literacy association is mediated by orthographic processing. First, RAN accounts for unique variance in word reading fluency even when differences in orthographic spelling were introduced before RAN. Second, RAN accounts for hardly any variance in word reading fluency when introduced after nonword reading fluency.Keywords
This publication has 32 references indexed in Scilit:
- Do Phonologic and Rapid Automatized Naming Deficits Differentially Affect Dyslexic Children With and Without a History of Language Delay? A Study of Italian Dyslexic ChildrenCognitive and Behavioral Neurology, 2006
- Rapid naming, not cancellation speed or articulation rate, predicts reading in an orthographically regular language (Italian)Child Neuropsychology, 2005
- Evaluation of the Double-Deficit Hypothesis in College Students Referred for Learning DifficultiesJournal of Learning Disabilities, 2005
- Developmental changes in the manifestation of a phonological deficit in dyslexic children learning to read a regular orthography.Journal of Educational Psychology, 2003
- Effects of Phonological Abilities and Linguistic Comprehension on the Development of ReadingScientific Studies of Reading, 2002
- Asynchrony of visual-orthographic and auditory-phonological word recognition processes: An underlying factor in dyslexiaReading and Writing, 2002
- The role of naming speed within a model of reading acquisitionReading and Writing, 2002
- Are RAN‐ and phonological awareness‐deficits additive in children with reading disabilities?Dyslexia, 2001
- Theoretical links among naming speed, precise timing mechanisms and orthographic skill in dyslexiaReading and Writing, 1993
- Rapid ‘automatized’ naming (R.A.N.): Dyslexia differentiated from other learning disabilitiesNeuropsychologia, 1976