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Related Concept Videos

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Children master language quickly and with relative ease, supported by both biological predisposition and reinforcement. B. F. Skinner (1957) proposed that language is learned through reinforcement, while Noam Chomsky (1965) argued that language acquisition mechanisms are biologically determined.
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Related Experiment Video

Updated: Jun 12, 2026

Lexical Decision Task for Studying Written Word Recognition in Adults with and without Dementia or Mild Cognitive Impairment
06:48

Lexical Decision Task for Studying Written Word Recognition in Adults with and without Dementia or Mild Cognitive Impairment

Published on: June 25, 2019

Foreign language learning, hyperlexia, and early word recognition.

R L Sparks1, M Artzer

  • 1College of Mount St. Joseph, Cincinnati, Ohio, USA. richard_sparks@mail.msj.edu

Annals of Dyslexia
|June 22, 2010
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Children with hyperlexia demonstrate strong word recognition but poor comprehension. This study found hyperlexic students excel in foreign language (FL) word recognition and spelling, suggesting these skills are independent of overall language abilities.

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Last Updated: Jun 12, 2026

Lexical Decision Task for Studying Written Word Recognition in Adults with and without Dementia or Mild Cognitive Impairment
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Published on: May 1, 2020

Area of Science:

  • Developmental Psychology
  • Linguistics
  • Special Education

Background:

  • Hyperlexia is characterized by early word reading skills alongside comprehension deficits.
  • Students with hyperlexia and those with disproportionately high word recognition warrant further investigation in foreign language acquisition.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To assess foreign language (FL) proficiency in Spanish for students with hyperlexia and high word recognition.
  • To compare their skills in word recognition, spelling, comprehension, writing, speaking, and listening against a neurotypical peer.

Main Methods:

  • Longitudinal case study following three high school students through a Spanish course.
  • Evaluation of specific FL skills including phonological, orthographic, and comprehension-based tasks.

Main Results:

  • The student without hyperlexia outperformed the other two on most FL measures.
  • Hyperlexic students and those with high word recognition excelled in Spanish tasks emphasizing phonology and orthography (word recognition, spelling).
  • These students scored lower on tasks requiring listening comprehension, speaking, and writing.

Conclusions:

  • Foreign language word recognition and spelling may function as modular skills, independent of general cognitive and linguistic abilities.
  • Individual students can exhibit uneven foreign language skill profiles across different language components.
  • A weak correlation may exist between foreign language word recognition and oral proficiency.