Determinants of phenotypes within the word reading (dis)ability population: The impact of diverse language experiences and child attributes on emerging reading skills
单词阅读(障碍)人群中表型的决定因素:不同的语言体验和儿童属性对新兴阅读技能的影响
基本信息
- 批准号:10681441
- 负责人:
- 金额:$ 5.14万
- 依托单位:
- 依托单位国家:美国
- 项目类别:
- 财政年份:2017
- 资助国家:美国
- 起止时间:2017-01-01 至 2026-07-31
- 项目状态:未结题
- 来源:
- 关键词:Access to InformationAddressAdoptedAffectBehavioralBenchmarkingBudgetsCharacteristicsChildCommunicationComplexDataDatabasesDecision MakingDevelopmentDiagnosisDisabled ChildrenDisabled PersonsDisciplineDyslexiaEducationEducational CurriculumEducational ModelsEnglish LanguageEnglish LearnerFoundationsFutureGenerationsGoalsIndividualIndividual DifferencesInformation DisseminationInstitutionInstructionInterdisciplinary StudyInterventionKnowledgeLanguageLanguage DevelopmentLeadershipLearningLinguisticsMediatingMethodsMotivationNational Institute of Child Health and Human DevelopmentNeurobiologyNeurocognitiveOrthographyParentsPerformancePhenotypePopulationPopulation HeterogeneityPostdoctoral FellowProcessPropertyProtocols documentationPsycholinguisticsReadingReading DisabilitiesRegulationResearchResearch ActivityResearch InfrastructureResearch PersonnelResearch Project GrantsResourcesSamplingScientistStudentsSystemTalentsTranslational ResearchUnderrepresented PopulationsWorkWritingbasebehavioral phenotypingcareercognitive abilitycognitive skillcohorteffective therapyethnic minorityexperiencefrontierinnovationinterdisciplinary approachliteracymultidisciplinarynext generationnovelphonologyprofessorpublic databaseracial minorityreading difficultiesremediationresearch and developmentskillssuccesstheoriesundergraduate student
项目摘要
This LD Hub P20 renewal entitled, “Determinants of phenotypes within the word reading (dis)ability
population: The impact of diverse language experiences and child attributes on emerging reading skills”
responds to the NICHD invitation for LD Innovation Hubs, FOA’s (RFA-HD-22-005). The overarching goal of this
LD Hub is to continue to lay the foundation for a generation of research that situates educational practices in a
novel theory of individual word reading development. The knowledge and product generated from this Hub will
be used to inform future behavioral, computational, and neurobiological studies examining the development of
word reading skills and will be used to align theories describing the relations between child- and word-attributes
that explain individual differences in word reading more closely with the educational challenges confronting
educators of typically developing (TD) and more specifically children with reading disability (RD), while also
expanding our understanding of where important differences exist in under-represented populations in RD
research. The proposal addresses the second priority of the RFA; namely “pushing innovation”, by exploring
new and complex behavioral phenotypes of RD that vary as a function of child experience and cognitive ability
across linguistically diverse samples of learners. Our LD Hub adopts an interdisciplinary approach to developing
the foundational and translational research needed to better understand the general development of item-level
word reading skill in a large portion of the English language, explore important differences in word reading
development across TD and RD populations with a focus on important historically under-represented
populations, and examine the interactions between child- and word-attributes that explain individual differences
in word reading development. The overall specific aims for the Hub include: (1) expand our understanding of
the basic mechanisms undergirding word reading development in English; (2) increase the scientific
infrastructure for research on reading disability by establishing a publicly available database
(developmental English Lexicon Project) incorporating all of the data collected in the research project;
(3) maintain and expand the Hub’s multidisciplinary team of experienced and early researchers with
expertise spanning educational, computational, and neurobiological research; and (4) strengthen the
scientific workforce by providing career enhancing opportunities for early career scientist and by
promoting its diversity through the participation of underrepresented racial and ethnic minorities, and
persons with disabilities. In achieving these aims, we will create a research team, a body of empirical
knowledge, and a theoretical framework setting the stage for (i) better educational practices, particularly related
to RD; (ii) translational research on related topics such as literacy acquisition by English Language Learners
(ELL) and speakers of dialects, and second-language acquisition; and (iii) a new generation of theories
embracing individual differences and strongly tied to the neurobiological bases of learning.
LD Hub P20 更新的标题为“单词阅读(dis)能力内表型的决定因素
人口:不同的语言经历和儿童属性对新兴阅读技能的影响”
响应 NICHD 对 LD 创新中心、FOA 的邀请 (RFA-HD-22-005) 的总体目标。
LD Hub 将继续为一代研究奠定基础,将教育实践置于
单个单词阅读发展的新颖理论将由该中心产生的知识和产品。
用于为未来的行为、计算和神经生物学研究提供信息,以检验其发展
单词阅读技能,并将用于调整描述儿童属性和单词属性之间关系的理论
更紧密地解释单词阅读的个体差异与面临的教育挑战
典型发育儿童(TD),更具体地说,有阅读障碍的儿童(RD)的教育者,同时也
扩大我们对 RD 中代表性不足的人群存在重要差异的了解
该提案通过探索解决了 RFA 的第二个优先事项,即“推动创新”。
RD 的新的、复杂的行为表型随着儿童经验和认知能力的变化而变化
我们的 LD 中心采用跨学科方法来开发不同语言的学习者样本。
更好地了解项目级总体发展所需的基础和转化研究
大部分英语语言的单词阅读技巧,探索单词阅读的重要差异
跨 TD 和 RD 人群的发展,重点关注历史上代表性不足的重要人群
人群,并检查解释个体差异的儿童属性和单词属性之间的相互作用
在文字阅读发展方面,该中心的总体具体目标包括:(1)扩大我们对文字阅读的理解。
支撑英语单词阅读发展的基本机制;(2)增加科学性;
通过建立公开数据库来研究阅读障碍的基础设施
(发展英语词典项目)纳入研究项目中收集的所有数据;
(3) 维持和扩大中心由经验丰富和早期研究人员组成的多学科团队
涵盖教育、计算和神经生物学研究的专业知识;(4) 加强
通过为早期职业科学家提供职业提升机会以及
通过代表性不足的种族和族裔的参与促进其多样性,以及
为了实现这些目标,我们将创建一个研究团队,一个实证机构。
知识和理论框架为(i)更好的教育实践奠定了基础,特别是相关的
RD;(ii) 相关主题的转化研究,例如英语语言学习者的读写能力习得
(ELL) 和方言使用者以及第二语言习得;以及 (iii) 新一代理论
拥抱个体差异,并与学习的神经生物学基础密切相关。
项目成果
期刊论文数量(0)
专著数量(0)
科研奖励数量(0)
会议论文数量(0)
专利数量(0)
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Donald L Compton其他文献
Revisiting the definition of dyslexia
重新审视阅读障碍的定义
- DOI:
- 发表时间:
2024 - 期刊:
- 影响因子:2.3
- 作者:
Hugh W Catts;N. P. Terry;Christopher J Lonigan;Donald L Compton;Richard K Wagner;Laura M. Steacy;K. Farquharson;Y. Petscher - 通讯作者:
Y. Petscher
Donald L Compton的其他文献
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{{ truncateString('Donald L Compton', 18)}}的其他基金
Determinants of phenotypes within the word reading (dis)ability population: The impact of diverse language experiences and child attributes on emerging reading skills
单词阅读(障碍)人群中表型的决定因素:不同的语言体验和儿童属性对新兴阅读技能的影响
- 批准号:
10681438 - 财政年份:2017
- 资助金额:
$ 5.14万 - 项目类别:
Determinants of phenotypes within the word reading (dis)ability population: The impact of diverse language experiences and child attributes on emerging reading skills
单词阅读(障碍)人群中表型的决定因素:不同的语言体验和儿童属性对新兴阅读技能的影响
- 批准号:
10533143 - 财政年份:2017
- 资助金额:
$ 5.14万 - 项目类别:
Determinants of phenotypes within the word reading (dis)ability population: The impact of diverse language experiences and child attributes on emerging reading skills
单词阅读(障碍)人群中表型的决定因素:不同的语言体验和儿童属性对新兴阅读技能的影响
- 批准号:
10681437 - 财政年份:2017
- 资助金额:
$ 5.14万 - 项目类别:
Determinants of phenotypes within the word reading (dis)ability population: The impact of diverse language experiences and child attributes on emerging reading skills
单词阅读(障碍)人群中表型的决定因素:不同的语言体验和儿童属性对新兴阅读技能的影响
- 批准号:
10533141 - 财政年份:2017
- 资助金额:
$ 5.14万 - 项目类别:
Experiential and child factors that determine acquisition of orthographic-phonological regularities in a quasi-regular writing system: An integrated behavioral/computational/neurobiological approach
决定准规则书写系统中拼写语音规则习得的经验因素和儿童因素:综合行为/计算/神经生物学方法
- 批准号:
10397917 - 财政年份:2017
- 资助金额:
$ 5.14万 - 项目类别:
Experiential and child factors that determine acquisition of orthographic-phonological regularities in a quasi-regular writing system: An integrated behavioral/computational/neurobiological approach
决定准规则书写系统中的拼写语音规则习得的经验因素和儿童因素:一种综合的行为/计算/神经生物学方法
- 批准号:
9273815 - 财政年份:2017
- 资助金额:
$ 5.14万 - 项目类别:
Determinants of phenotypes within the word reading (dis)ability population: The impact of diverse language experiences and child attributes on emerging reading skills
单词阅读(障碍)人群中表型的决定因素:不同的语言体验和儿童属性对新兴阅读技能的影响
- 批准号:
10681438 - 财政年份:2017
- 资助金额:
$ 5.14万 - 项目类别:
Determinants of phenotypes within the word reading (dis)ability population: The impact of diverse language experiences and child attributes on emerging reading skills
单词阅读(障碍)人群中表型的决定因素:不同的语言体验和儿童属性对新兴阅读技能的影响
- 批准号:
10533142 - 财政年份:2017
- 资助金额:
$ 5.14万 - 项目类别:
Determinants of phenotypes within the word reading (dis)ability population: The impact of diverse language experiences and child attributes on emerging reading skills
单词阅读(障碍)人群中表型的决定因素:不同的语言体验和儿童属性对新兴阅读技能的影响
- 批准号:
10681437 - 财政年份:2017
- 资助金额:
$ 5.14万 - 项目类别:
Relating Decoding and Fluency Development in RD Children
RD 儿童的解码和流畅性发展的关系
- 批准号:
6914221 - 财政年份:2004
- 资助金额:
$ 5.14万 - 项目类别:
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