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Writing and dysgraphia 1 : The lay of the land| old_uid | 1148 |
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| title | Writing and dysgraphia 1 : The lay of the land |
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| start_date | 2006/05/03 |
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| schedule | 17h-19h |
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| online | no |
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| location_info | esc. B, 3e étage, salle W |
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| details | suite du cours le 10 mai, même salle, même heure |
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| summary | In this introductory lesson I will (briefly) review the evolution of writing systems, and the approach of neurologists and neuropsychologists to writing disorders. I will also sketch the main clinical forms of dysgraphia, and how they constrain hypotheses of the organization of writing processes. The view that emerges from these studies is that writing requires at the least the ability to retrieve stored lexical information (for writing familiar words), to convert sound into print at a sublexical level (for writing novel words), and to hold information about the graphemic string (for writing familiar and novel words alike). |
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| responsibles | Delmer |
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