Brain, Vol 121, Issue 9 1721-1734, Copyright © 1998 by Oxford University Press
C Luzzatti, M Laiacona, N Allamano, A De Tanti and MG Inzaghi
We report results of a writing task given to 53 mildly to moderately
aphasic Italian subjects. The task was designed to test the writing
performance along the subword-level routine for the spelling of regular
words and non-words, and along the lexical routine for the spelling of
irregular words. The aim of the study was to identify the incidence of
different dysgraphic subtypes in Italian, a language that is considered to
have shallow orthography. Its spelling, however, is not completely free of
ambiguity. A five-part writing task was used: (i) words with regular
one-sound-to-one-grapheme conversion; (ii) words with regular syllabic
conversion; (iii) words with ambiguous transcription; (iv) loan-words; and
(v) non-words. For regular words, the effects of word length and word
frequency, and of the variables determining the complexity of the
acoustic-to-phonological conversion (continuant versus plosive phones;
consonant-vowel sequence versus doubled consonants or consonant clusters)
were also considered. Patients' performances were classified according to
the presence of a dissociation between (i) regular words and non-words,
(ii) regular words and words with unpredictable spellings, and (iii)
one-to-one and syllabic conversions. The 53 aphasic patients span the whole
spectrum of dysgraphic taxonomy. Thirty-nine patients, in particular,
manifested a dissociated pattern of performance. Eighteen patients showed a
prevalent surface dysgraphic pattern and seven a phonological one, while 11
patients showed a mixed pattern (i.e. a better performance for regular
words than for ambiguous words or regular non-words). Three patients showed
a specific deficit for regular syllabic conversion rules only. A high rate
of 'mixed dysgraphia' suggests either a mutual interaction of the two
impaired routines when regular words are written, or two separate
functional lesions: one at the level of the auditory-to-phonological
conversion procedure, the other at the level of the orthographic output
lexicon.
ARTICLES
Writing disorders in Italian aphasic patients. A multiple single-case study of dysgraphia in a language with shallow orthography
Istituto di Psicologia della Facolta Medica, Universita degli Studi di Milano, Italy. luzz@imiucca.csi.unimi.it
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