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Dive into the research topics where Eric Lambert is active.

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Featured researches published by Eric Lambert.


Cognition | 2009

Orthographic vs. phonologic syllables in handwriting production.

Sonia Kandel; Lucie Hérault; Géraldine Grosjacques; Eric Lambert; Michel Fayol

French children program the words they write syllable by syllable. We examined whether the syllable the children use to segment words is determined phonologically (i.e., is derived from speech production processes) or orthographically. Third, 4th and 5th graders wrote on a digitiser words that were mono-syllables phonologically (e.g. barque=[baRk]) but bi-syllables orthographically (e.g. barque=bar.que). These words were matched to words that were bi-syllables both phonologically and orthographically (e.g. balcon=[bal.kõ] and bal.con). The results on letter stroke duration and fluency yielded significant peaks at the syllable boundary for both types of words, indicating that the children use orthographic rather than phonological syllables as processing units to program the words they write.


Frontiers in Psychology | 2013

Influence of handwriting skills during spelling in primary and lower secondary grades.

Virginie Pontart; Christel Bidet-Ildei; Eric Lambert; Pauline Morisset; Lisa Flouret; Denis Alamargot

We sought to identify, the impact of handwriting skills on the efficiency and temporal course of word spelling across Grades 2–9. Eighty-four students, drawn from primary and lower secondary schools, were asked to perform a dictation task to assess their word spelling. They also had to write out the letters of the alphabet, as well as their firstnames and surnames, from memory to assess their handwriting skills. Handwriting kinematics were recorded using a digitizing tablet and a computer running Eye and Pen software. Results revealed that graphomotor skills (as assessed by the name writing task) influenced the success and temporal course of spelling, but only in primary grades, whereas the influence of orthographic knowledge (as assessed by the alphabet task) could still be observed in the lower secondary grades, even if it ceased to influence the temporal course and only affected errors. We discuss what these findings tell us about changes in transcription processes over the course of child development.


Scientific Studies of Reading | 2010

Early Training in Oral Comprehension and Phonological Skills: Results of a Three-Year Longitudinal Study

Maryse Bianco; Pascal Bressoux; Anne-Lise Doyen; Eric Lambert; Laurent Lima; Catherine Pellenq; Michel Zorman

A sample of 1,273 4-year-old children were followed for 3 years. The children participated in 1 of 2 comprehension training programs, or in a phonological awareness training program. The comprehension programs explored the possibility of improving young childrens oral comprehension in an educational setting. The first focused on the component skills of comprehension; the second involved storybook reading. Phonological awareness and oral language comprehension skills were measured repeatedly in the course of the study. The data were analyzed using multilevel growth-curve models. The results showed that it is possible to improve oral comprehension if the training focuses on its component skills and extends over 2 semesters. When these conditions were met, training effects still existed 9 months after the program had ended. Finally, phonological training improved phonological awareness but not comprehension, and comprehension-skill training improved oral comprehension but not phonological awareness.


Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology | 2012

Processing of syllables during handwriting: effects of graphomotor constraints.

Solen Sausset; Eric Lambert; Thierry Olive; Denis Larocque

The processing of syllables during the writing of isolated words has been shown to occur either before or during the writing of the word containing them. To demonstrate that this difference is related to graphomotor constraints, participants copied bi- and trisyllabic words three times, in four conditions where graphomotor constraints were gradually increased. As expected, latencies were only affected by syllable number in the low-constraint condition. In all four conditions, interletter intervals at syllable boundaries were longer than intrasyllabic interletter intervals. The difference between inter- and intrasyllabic intervals increased with the level of graphomotor constraint. Taken together, these findings indicate that under low graphomotor-constraint conditions, all the syllable processing takes place prior to the writing of a word, whereas under higher graphomotor-constraint conditions, syllable processing is more sequential, each syllable being processed just before it is written.


Frontiers in Psychology | 2013

Flexibility of orthographic and graphomotor coordination during a handwritten copy task: effect of time pressure

Solen Sausset; Eric Lambert; Thierry Olive

The coordination of the various processes involved in language production is a subject of keen debate in writing research. Some authors hold that writing processes can be flexibly coordinated according to task demands, whereas others claim that process coordination is entirely inflexible. For instance, orthographic planning has been shown to be resource-dependent during handwriting, but inflexible in typing, even under time pressure. The present study therefore went one step further in studying flexibility in the coordination of orthographic processing and graphomotor execution, by measuring the impact of time pressure during a handwritten copy task. Orthographic and graphomotor processes were observed via syllable processing. Writers copied out two- and three-syllable words three times in a row, with and without time pressure. Latencies and letter measures at syllable boundaries were analyzed. We hypothesized that if coordination is flexible and varies according to task demands, it should be modified by time pressure, affecting both latency before execution and duration of execution. We therefore predicted that the extent of syllable processing before execution would be reduced under time pressure and, as a consequence, syllable effects during execution would be more salient. Results showed, however, that time pressure interacted neither with syllable number nor with syllable structure. Accordingly, syllable processing appears to remain the same regardless of time pressure. The flexibility of process coordination during handwriting is discussed, as is the operationalization of time pressure constraints.


Annee Psychologique | 2001

NOVLEX: une base de données lexicales pour les élèves de primaire

Eric Lambert; David Chesnet


Reading and Writing | 2008

The effect of the number of syllables on handwriting production

Eric Lambert; Sonia Kandel; Michel Fayol; Eric Espéret


Reading and Writing | 2010

Using eye and pen movements to trace the development of writing expertise: case studies of a 7th, 9th and 12th grader, graduate student, and professional writer

Denis Alamargot; Sylvie Plane; Eric Lambert; David Chesnet


Canadian Journal of Experimental Psychology | 2011

Dynamics of the Spelling Process during a Copy Task: Effects of Regularity and Frequency

Eric Lambert; Denis Alamargot; Denis Larocque; Gilles Caporossi


Reading and Writing | 2007

Text composition by deaf and hearing middle-school students: The role of working memory

Denis Alamargot; Eric Lambert; Claire Thebault; Christophe Dansac

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