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Dive into the research topics where Willy Serniclaes is active.

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Featured researches published by Willy Serniclaes.


Journal of Experimental Child Psychology | 2003

Development of Phonological and Orthographic Processing in Reading Aloud, in Silent Reading, and in Spelling: A Four-Year Longitudinal Study.

Liliane Sprenger-Charolles; Linda S. Siegel; Danielle Béchennec; Willy Serniclaes

The development of phonological and orthographic processing was studied from the middle of Grade 1 to the end of Grade 4 (age 6; 6-10 years) using the effects of regularity and of lexicality in reading aloud and in spelling tasks, and using the effect of pseudohomophony in a silent reading task. In all the tasks, signs of reliance on phonological processing were found even when indicators of reliance on orthographic processing appeared. Multiple regression analyses were conducted to determine which early skills predict later reading achievement. Pseudoword and irregular word scores were used as measures for phonological and orthographic skills, respectively. Only middle of Grade 1 phonological reading skills accounted for independent variance in end of Grade 4 orthographic skills. Conversely, from the middle to the end of Grade 1, and from the end of Grade 1 to the end of Grade 4, both orthographic and phonological skills accounted for independent variance in later orthographic skills. In the prediction of phonological skills, only the unique contribution of earlier phonological skills was significant. Thus, phonological and orthographic processing appear to be reciprocally related, rather than independent components of written word recognition. However, very early reliance on the phonological procedure seems to be the bootstrapping mechanism for reading acquisition.


Journal of Experimental Child Psychology | 2008

Discrimination of speech sounds by children with dyslexia: Comparisons with chronological age and reading level controls

Caroline Bogliotti; Willy Serniclaes; Souhila Messaoud-Galusi; Liliane Sprenger-Charolles

Previous studies have shown that children suffering from developmental dyslexia have a deficit in categorical perception of speech sounds. The aim of the current study was to better understand the nature of this categorical perception deficit. In this study, categorical perception skills of children with dyslexia were compared with those of chronological age and reading level controls. Children identified and discriminated /do-to/ syllables along a voice onset time (VOT) continuum. Results showed that children with dyslexia discriminated among phonemically contrastive pairs less accurately than did chronological age and reading level controls and also showed higher sensitivity in the discrimination of allophonic contrasts. These results suggest that children with dyslexia perceive speech with allophonic units rather than phonemic units. The origin of allophonic perception in the course of perceptual development and its implication for reading acquisition are discussed.


NeuroImage | 2007

Top-down processes during auditory phoneme categorization in dyslexia: a PET study.

O. Dufor; Willy Serniclaes; Liliane Sprenger-Charolles; Jean-François Démonet

While persistence of subtle phonological deficits in dyslexic adults is well documented, deficit of categorical perception of phonemes has received little attention so far. We studied learning of phoneme categorization during an activation H(2)O(15) PET experiment in 14 dyslexic adults and 16 normal readers with similar age, handedness and performance IQ. Dyslexic subjects exhibited typical, marked impairments in reading and phoneme awareness tasks. During the PET experiment, subjects performed a discrimination task involving sine wave analogues of speech first presented as pairs of electronic sounds and, after debriefing, as syllables /ba/ and /da/. Discrimination performance and brain activation were compared between the acoustic mode and the speech mode of the task which involved physically identical stimuli; signal changes in the speech mode relative to the acoustic mode revealed the neural counterparts of phonological top-down processes that are engaged after debriefing. Although dyslexic subjects showed good abilities to learn discriminating speech sounds, their performance remained lower than those of normal readers on the discrimination task over the whole experiment. Activation observed in the speech mode in normal readers showed a strongly left-lateralized pattern involving the superior temporal, inferior parietal and inferior lateral frontal cortex. Frontal and parietal subparts of these left-sided regions were significantly more activated in the control group than in the dyslexic group. Activations in the right frontal cortex were larger in the dyslexic group than in the control group for both speech and acoustic modes relative to rest. Dyslexic subjects showed an unexpected large deactivation in the medial occipital cortex for the acoustic mode that may reflect increased effortful attention to auditory stimuli.


Cognition | 2005

Categorical perception of speech sounds in illiterate adults

Willy Serniclaes; Paulo Ventura; Jose Morais; Régine Kolinsky

Children affected by dyslexia exhibit a deficit in the categorical perception of speech sounds, characterized by both poorer discrimination of between-category differences and by better discrimination of within-category differences, compared to normal readers. These categorical perception anomalies might be at the origin of dyslexia, by hampering the set up of grapheme-phoneme correspondences, but they might also be the consequence of poor reading skills, as literacy probably contributes to stabilizing phonological categories. The aim of the present study was to investigate this issue by comparing categorical perception performances of illiterate and literate people. Identification and discrimination responses were collected for a /ba-da/ synthetic place-of-articulation continuum and between-group differences in both categorical perception and in the precision of the categorical boundary were examined. The results showed that illiterate vs. literate people did not differ in categorical perception, thereby suggesting that the categorical perception anomalies displayed by dyslexics are indeed a cause rather than a consequence of their reading problems. However, illiterate people displayed a less precise categorical boundary and a stronger lexical bias, both also associated with dyslexia, which might, therefore, be a specific consequence of written language deprivation or impairment.


Journal of Experimental Child Psychology | 2009

French native speakers in the making: from language-general to language-specific voicing boundaries.

Ingrid Hoonhorst; Cécile Colin; Emily Markessis; Monique Radeau; Paul Deltenre; Willy Serniclaes

By examining voice onset time (VOT) discrimination in 4- and 8-month-olds raised in a French-speaking environment, the current study addresses the question of the role played by linguistic experience in the reshaping of the initial perceptual abilities. Results showed that the language-general -30- and +30-ms VOT boundaries are better discriminated than the 0-ms boundary in 4-month-olds, whereas 8-month-olds better discriminate the 0-ms boundary. These data support explanations of speech development stressing the effects of both language-general boundaries and linguistic environment (attunement theory and coupling theory). Results also suggest that the acquisition of the adult voicing boundary (at 0 ms VOT in French vs. +30 ms VOT in English) is faster and more linear in French than in English. This latter aspect of the results might be related to differences in the consistency of VOT distributions of voiced and voiceless stops between languages.


Research in Developmental Disabilities | 2012

Allophonic Mode of Speech Perception in Dutch Children at Risk for Dyslexia: A Longitudinal Study.

Mark W. Noordenbos; Eliane Segers; Willy Serniclaes; Holger Mitterer; Ludo Verhoeven

There is ample evidence that individuals with dyslexia have a phonological deficit. A growing body of research also suggests that individuals with dyslexia have problems with categorical perception, as evidenced by weaker discrimination of between-category differences and better discrimination of within-category differences compared to average readers. Whether the categorical perception problems of individuals with dyslexia are a result of their reading problems or a cause has yet to be determined. Whether the observed perception deficit relates to a more general auditory deficit or is specific to speech also has yet to be determined. To shed more light on these issues, the categorical perception abilities of children at risk for dyslexia and chronological age controls were investigated before and after the onset of formal reading instruction in a longitudinal study. Both identification and discrimination data were collected using identical paradigms for speech and non-speech stimuli. Results showed the children at risk for dyslexia to shift from an allophonic mode of perception in kindergarten to a phonemic mode of perception in first grade, while the control group showed a phonemic mode already in kindergarten. The children at risk for dyslexia thus showed an allophonic perception deficit in kindergarten, which was later suppressed by phonemic perception as a result of formal reading instruction in first grade; allophonic perception in kindergarten can thus be treated as a clinical marker for the possibility of later reading problems.


Journal of Speech Language and Hearing Research | 2012

Perception of Speech Features by French-Speaking Children with Cochlear Implants

Sophie Bouton; Willy Serniclaes; Josiane Bertoncini; Pascale Colé

Purpose: The present study investigates the perception of phonological features in French-speaking children with cochlear implants (CIs) compared with normal-hearing (NH) children matched for listening age. Method: Scores for discrimination and identification of minimal pairs for all features defining consonants (e.g., place, voicing, manner, nasality) and vowels (e.g., frontness, nasality, aperture) were measured in each listener. Results: The results indicated no differences in “categorical perception,” specified as a similar difference between discrimination and identification between CI children and controls. However, CI children demonstrated a lower level of “categorical precision,” that is, lesser accuracy in both feature identification and discrimination, than NH children, with the magnitude of the deficit depending on the feature. Conclusions: If sensitive periods of language development extend well beyond the moment of implantation, the consequences of hearing deprivation for the acquisition of categorical perception should be fairly important in comparison to categorical precision because categorical precision develops more slowly than categorical perception in NH children. These results do not support the idea that the sensitive period for development of categorical perception is restricted to the first 1–2 years of life. The sensitive period may be significantly longer. Differences in precision may reflect the acoustic limitations of the cochlear implant, such as coding for temporal fine structure and frequency resolution.


Journal of Phonetics | 2010

Development of voicing perception in French: Comparing adults, adolescents, and children

Victoria Medina; Ingrid Hoonhorst; Caroline Bogliotti; Willy Serniclaes

Abstract Previous studies suggest that the development of the perception of speech features is based on the adaptation of universal predispositions to the particular categories present in the native language. Previous studies point to a long-lasting development of the location and the precision of perceptual boundaries. However, there is no clear evidence about changes in “categorical perception”, i.e. in the degree of equivalence of identification and discrimination boundaries. The objective of the present study was to investigate the development of boundary location and precision between late childhood and adulthood, and to gather evidence for possible changes in categorical perception during this period. Voicing perception in French stops was investigated with both identification and discrimination data in children (9-year-olds), adolescents (17-year-olds), and adults. The results confirmed the effect of age on boundary precision, but did not show an effect of age on either boundary location or on categorical perception. The results also suggest that the development of categorization performance starts around the boundary and is followed by decreased sensitivity near the prototypes.


Neuropsychologia | 2012

Neural evidence of allophonic perception in children at risk for dyslexia.

Mark W. Noordenbos; Eliane Segers; Willy Serniclaes; Holger Mitterer; Ludo Verhoeven

Learning to read is a complex process that develops normally in the majority of children and requires the mapping of graphemes to their corresponding phonemes. Problems with the mapping process nevertheless occur in about 5% of the population and are typically attributed to poor phonological representations, which are--in turn--attributed to underlying speech processing difficulties. We examined auditory discrimination of speech sounds in 6-year-old beginning readers with a familial risk of dyslexia (n=31) and no such risk (n=30) using the mismatch negativity (MMN). MMNs were recorded for stimuli belonging to either the same phoneme category (acoustic variants of /bə/) or different phoneme categories (/bə/ vs. /də/). Stimuli from different phoneme categories elicited MMNs in both the control and at-risk children, but the MMN amplitude was clearly lower in the at-risk children. In contrast, the stimuli from the same phoneme category elicited an MMN in only the children at risk for dyslexia. These results show children at risk for dyslexia to be sensitive to acoustic properties that are irrelevant in their language. Our findings thus suggest a possible cause of dyslexia in that they show 6-year-old beginning readers with at least one parent diagnosed with dyslexia to have a neural sensitivity to speech contrasts that are irrelevant in the ambient language. This sensitivity clearly hampers the development of stable phonological representations and thus leads to significant reading impairment later in life.


Speech Communication | 2011

Categorical perception of voicing, colors and facial expressions: A developmental study

Ingrid Hoonhorst; Victoria Medina; Cécile Colin; Emily Markessis; Monique Radeau; Paul Deltenre; Willy Serniclaes

The aim of the present paper was to compare the development of perceptual categorization of voicing, colors and facial expressions in French-speaking children (from 6 to 8 years) and adults. Differences in both categorical perception, i.e. the correspondence between identification and discrimination performances, and in boundary precision, indexed by the steepness of the identification slope, were investigated. Whereas there was no significant effect of age on categorical perception, boundary precision increased with age, both for voicing and facial expressions though not for colors. These results suggest that the development of boundary precision arises from a general cognitive maturation across different perceptual domains. However, this is not without domain specific effects since we found (1) a correlation between the development of voicing perception and some reading performances and (2) an earlier maturation of boundary precision for colors compared to voicing and facial expressions. These comparative data indicate that whereas general cognitive maturation has some influence on the development of perceptual categorization, this is not without domain-specific effects, the structural complexity of the categories being one of them.

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Cécile Colin

Université libre de Bruxelles

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Gregory Collet

Université libre de Bruxelles

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Jacqueline Leybaert

Université libre de Bruxelles

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Paul Deltenre

Université libre de Bruxelles

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Liliane Sprenger-Charolles

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Ingrid Hoonhorst

Université libre de Bruxelles

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Emily Markessis

Université libre de Bruxelles

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Monique Radeau

Université libre de Bruxelles

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Victoria Medina

Paris Descartes University

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René Carré

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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