Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where P.H.F. Bos is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by P.H.F. Bos.


Journal of Experimental Child Psychology | 2017

Improvements in reading accuracy as a result of increased interletter spacing are not specific to children with dyslexia

Britt Hakvoort; Madelon van den Boer; Tineke Leenaars; P.H.F. Bos; Jurgen Tijms

Recently, increased interletter spacing (LS) has been studied as a way to enhance reading fluency. It is suggested that increased LS improves reading performance, especially in poor readers. Theoretically, these findings are well substantiated as a result of diminished crowding effects. Empirically, however, findings on LS are inconclusive. In two experiments, we examined whether effects of increased LS are specific to children with dyslexia and whether increased LS affects word or sentence processing. In the first experiment, 30 children with dyslexia and 30 controls (mean age=9years 11months) read sentences in standard and increased LS conditions. In the second experiment, these sentences were read by an unselected sample of 189 readers (mean age=9years 3months) in either a sentence or word-by-word reading condition. The first experiment showed that increased LS affected children with dyslexia and controls in similar ways. Participants made fewer errors in the increased LS condition than in the standard LS condition. Reading rates were not affected. There were no indications that the effect of LS was related to reading ability, not even for a subgroup of readers. Findings of the second experiment were similar. Increased LS resulted in fewer errors, not faster reading rates. This was found only when complete sentences were presented, not when sentences were read word by word. Three main conclusions can be drawn. First, increased LS appears to affect reading accuracy only. Second, the findings do not support claims that increased LS specifically affects poor readers. And third, the effect of LS seems to occur at the interword level. Theoretical and practical implications of these findings are discussed.


Iral-international Review of Applied Linguistics in Language Teaching | 2004

Introduction: The pragmatics-syntax and the semantics-syntax interface in acquisition

P.H.F. Bos; Bart Hollebrandse; Petra Sleeman


Archive | 2006

Morocco and the Netherlands

W. Fritschy; P.H.F. Bos


Accounting, Management and Information Technologies | 1998

Cohesive devices in bilingual development

J. Aarssen; P.H.F. Bos; G. Extra; L. Verhoeven


Archive | 2006

Morocco and the Netherlands: society, economy, culture

W. Fritschy; P.H.F. Bos


Symposium Vertel vaardig! | 2015

Narratieve vaardigheden van meertalige kinderen

D. Spierings; P.H.F. Bos


Reading in the forest | 2015

Easy-to-read books for dyslexic children in the Netherlands

M.J.A. Lamers; F. Banning; E. van den Boogaart; A. Gilein; B. Kuiper; M. van Pelt; E. Verhoef; P.H.F. Bos


Nederlandse Taalkunde | 2015

Bespreking van Language growth in Dutch school-age children with specific language impairment [Review of: R. Zwitserlood (2014) Language growth in Dutch school-age children with specific language impairment]

P.H.F. Bos


Les changements linguistiques au Maroc: bilan et évaluation | 2013

Moroccan adolescents in the Netherlands: A case of language shift

P.H.F. Bos; M. Bénitez Fernández; C. M. Miller; J.J. de Ruiter; Y. Tamer


Levende Talen Magazine | 2012

Taalstoornissen en meertaligheid: Marokkaanse kinderen in Nederland

P.H.F. Bos

Collaboration


Dive into the P.H.F. Bos's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Jurgen Tijms

University of Amsterdam

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

M.J.A. Lamers

Radboud University Nijmegen

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

C. M. Miller

City University of New York

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge