44 results on '"Daniela Traficante"'
Search Results
2. Multiple Types of Developmental Dyslexias in a Shallow Orthography: Principles for Diagnostic Screening in Italian
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Daniela Traficante, Claudio Luzzatti, and Naama Friedmann
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reading models ,types of developmental dyslexias ,reading error coding ,Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry ,RC321-571 - Abstract
A new dyslexia screening test for Italian, Tiltan-IT, is presented. The test was developed based on an integrated dual-route model of reading, which describes in detail specific mechanisms underpinning early visual processes as well as the lexical and the sublexical routes. The principle according to which the test was developed is that each dyslexia type is manifested in different kinds of errors and in different kinds of stimuli, and we therefore included stimuli sensitive to each dyslexia type in the test. Tiltan-IT is a reading aloud test that includes word, nonword, and word pair lists. The test was administered to 618 Italian-speaking children (2nd–8th grade). Each error produced by the children was classified through the coding scheme developed to detect the different types of dyslexias described by the reading model. The Tiltan-IT was able to identify 110 children with dyslexia. The identified dyslexia types included letter position dyslexia, attentional dyslexia, letter identity dyslexia, surface dyslexia, vowel dyslexia, consonant conversion dyslexia, multi-letter phonological dyslexia, voicing dyslexia. The results confirm that the selection of items in the Tiltan-IT enabled the detection of the wide variety of dyslexias in Italian, some of them for the first time, adding evidence for the cross-linguistic validity of multiple types of developmental dyslexias and for the dual-route model of reading.
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- 2024
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3. Attachment networks in young adults
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Lucia L. Carli, Paolo Alessandro Alì, Elena Anzelmo, Claudia Caprin, Franca Crippa, Marcello Gallucci, Loredana Moioli, Daniela Traficante, and Judith A. Feeney
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attachment network ,young adults ,attachment functions ,attachment strength ,primary figure ,full-blown attachment ,Psychology ,BF1-990 - Abstract
IntroductionThis study investigated attachment networks in a sample of Italian young adults. Attachment networks were defined in terms of attachment functions, attachment strength, the presence of a primary figure, and full-blown attachments.MethodParticipants were 405 young adults, and we studied the effects of the demographic variables of gender, romantic status (whether single, involved in a romantic relationship for less or more than 24 months) and employment (whether university students or workers) on the structure of attachment networks. Participants were asked to answer the WHO-TO questionnaire, and derived indexes were analyzed using mixed ANOVAs, linear and logistic regression techniques.ResultsResults indicated that while friends still had great importance in the network, partners were acquiring increasing relevance; at the same time, parents, and particularly mothers, remained central figures, particularly for the secure base function. Regarding the demographic variables, we observed that women reported stronger bonds with their mothers than men did, while the importance of friends was higher for men than for women. Additionally, our study supports previous findings underlining the importance of romantic partners in this phase of life, with participants involved in romantic relationships for longer than 24 months showing a fully developed attachment bond with their partners. Finally, for workers, the transfer of functions from the family-of-origin to external figures seemed to be fostered.DiscussionIn conclusion, young Italian young adults go through a phase of intensive restructuring of attachment bond networks, particularly in relation to the consolidation of romantic relationships and work commitments.
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- 2024
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4. Editorial: New Educational Technologies and Their Impact on Students' Well-Being and Inclusion Process
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Mirta Vernice, Barbara Carretti, Daniela Sarti, Daniela Traficante, and Maria Luisa Lorusso
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innovative technology in education ,inclusion ,students well-being ,technology and learning ,teaching efficacy ,Psychology ,BF1-990 - Published
- 2021
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5. Technology in Rehabilitative Interventions for Children: Challenges and Opportunities
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Daniela Traficante and Alessandro Antonietti
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n/a ,Pediatrics ,RJ1-570 - Abstract
Technology innovation has been leading to the development of an increasing number of applications that aim to support the rehabilitation of cognitive functions [...]
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- 2022
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6. Telerehabilitation and Wellbeing Experience in Children with Special Needs during the COVID-19 Pandemic
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Daniela Sarti, Marinella De Salvatore, Emanuela Pagliano, Elisa Granocchio, Daniela Traficante, and Elisabetta Lombardi
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telerehabilitation ,specific learning disorders ,cerebral palsy ,well-being ,Pediatrics ,RJ1-570 - Abstract
Social distancing due to the COVID-19 pandemic represented a golden opportunity to implement telerehabilitation for clinical groups of children. The present study aims to show the impact that telerehabilitation had on the experience of well-being of children with special needs being treated at the Foundation IRCCS Neurological Institute ‘C. Besta’ in Milan (Specific Learning Disorders and Cerebral Palsy diagnosis); it aims to do so by comparing it with experiences of those who did not undertake telerehabilitation despite the diagnosis during the pandemic, and with typically developing children. Results show that the three groups differed in the Support, Respect and Learning dimensions of well-being experience. Post hoc comparisons revealed that children with Specific Learning Disorders and Cerebral Palsy scored higher than normotypical children in Support and in Respect scales. Furthermore, children who experienced telerehabilitation showed the highest scores on the Learning scale in comparison with the other two groups. These results support the importance of reorganizing care and assistance by integrating telemedicine, which seems to have fostered a positive experience of well-being in people with special needs, particularly in the perception of a supportive environment that respects psychological needs.
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- 2021
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7. Comparison on Well-Being, Engagement and Perceived School Climate in Secondary School Students with Learning Difficulties and Specific Learning Disorders: An Exploratory Study
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Elisabetta Lombardi, Daniela Traficante, Roberta Bettoni, Ilaria Offredi, Mirta Vernice, and Daniela Sarti
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specific learning disorder ,learning difficulties ,well-being ,school engagement ,school climate ,Psychology ,BF1-990 - Abstract
Reading and writing skills influence the social status of students, exerting effects not only on learning, but also on wellbeing. This study aimed to assess the impact of diagnosis of specific learning disorder on well-being in secondary-school students, comparing students with a diagnosis of specific learning disorder (SLD-group), students showing learning difficulties without diagnosis (LD-group) and students without learning difficulties (control-group). Students were tested with neuropsychological screening tests in order to identify learning difficulties and were further assessed by means of psychological and school well-being questionnaires. The results show that LD group perceive themselves as having a low sense of mastery and autonomy, less interest and engagement in daily activities and low peer social support than their schoolmates. This result highlights, for the LD group, a low well-being experience, which is not observed in the SLD and control groups. On the contrary, SLD group students do not differ from control group students in any dimensions except for the perceived parents’ support and involvement in school life, in which the SLD group show the highest scores. This work underlines the importance of having a diagnosis as it seems to work as a protective factor for both the psychological and school well-being of the student.
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- 2021
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8. The Impact of School Climate on Well-Being Experience and School Engagement: A Study With High-School Students
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Elisabetta Lombardi, Daniela Traficante, Roberta Bettoni, Ilaria Offredi, Marisa Giorgetti, and Mirta Vernice
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school climate ,well-being ,engagement ,adolescents ,personality traits ,Psychology ,BF1-990 - Abstract
The aim of this work is to investigate the factors promoting students’ engagement at school and supporting their well-being experience. According to the Positive Education there is a strong relationship between school environment and student’s well-being. Moreover, the quality of the school climate perceived by the students was found to influence engagement in school activities, as well. In this study, 153 students (M = 67) attending 10th grade were presented with tests and questionnaires to assess individual assets (personality traits, literacy skills), emerging appraisals (school-climate, well-being experience) and emerging actions (school engagement), according to the Student Well-Being Model. Path analysis showed that the best model does include neither individual assets nor direct effect of school climate on engagement, as the effect of school climate on engagement is mediated by well-being experience. The main result is that school climate has been confirmed as an important factor to be considered to improve engagement in school activities, but it is effective only when its influence can modify the well-being experience of the students. Moreover, the lack of significant effects of individual assets in the model suggests that improving school climate means to support well-being experience and, indirectly school engagement, irrespective to learning abilities and personality traits. This work encourages working in/with schools to implement positive education programs that support and sustain a positive school climate and culture for school-community wellbeing.
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- 2019
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9. Tell Me a Story: Socio-Emotional Functioning, Well-Being and Problematic Smartphone Use in Adolescents With Specific Learning Disabilities
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Daniela Sarti, Roberta Bettoni, Ilaria Offredi, Marta Tironi, Elisabetta Lombardi, Daniela Traficante, and Maria Luisa Lorusso
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socio-emotional functioning ,well-being ,smartphone addiction ,SLD ,adolescence ,narratives ,Psychology ,BF1-990 - Abstract
Although Specific Learning Disabilities (SLD) are described as specific difficulties in one or more academic areas, often socio-emotional problems are also reported to be related to well-being and school engagement. Moreover, recent evidence shows that emotional problems and reduced social support predict problematic use of new technologies, such as a smartphone, that can, in turn, increase these problems. In this study, we aimed to investigate socio-emotional functioning and its relation to well-being, school engagement, and problematic smartphone use. Social and emotional skills of 19 adolescents with a diagnosis of SLD and 19 control adolescents were assessed through a narrative test; adolescents were requested to narrate complete stories elicited by pictures representing social situations. Information on well-being and problematic smartphone use were collected through questionnaires. The comparison between groups showed differences in cognitive-social skills, although no significant differences in emotional functioning were found. Additionally, the perception of the social environment as supportive and trustworthy was related to general well-being for both groups, whereas the perception of limits and rules set by the adult world appeared to be related to a decreased investment in learning processes only for the SLD students. Finally, correlation analysis showed that smartphone use was associated with reduced perception of social support and to a decreased ability to understand and solve social situations. These results assert the critical role played by social information processing and social support in terms of well-being in adolescence, and contribute to enhancing knowledge of the mechanisms underlying problematic smartphone use in a clinical sample.
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- 2019
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10. Editorial: Word Morphology and Written Language Acquisition: Insights From Typical and Atypical Development in Different Orthographies
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Lynne G. Duncan, Daniela Traficante, and Maximiliano A. Wilson
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word morphology ,developmental dyslexia ,cross-linguistic perspective ,literacy skills ,morphological awareness training ,Psychology ,BF1-990 - Published
- 2019
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11. Effects of Reading Proficiency and of Base and Whole-Word Frequency on Reading Noun- and Verb-Derived Words: An Eye-Tracking Study in Italian Primary School Children
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Daniela Traficante, Marco Marelli, and Claudio Luzzatti
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reading acquisition ,word morphology ,eye movements ,verb-derived nouns ,noun-derived nouns ,word frequency ,Psychology ,BF1-990 - Abstract
The aim of this study is to assess the role of readers’ proficiency and of the base-word distributional properties on eye-movement behavior. Sixty-two typically developing children, attending 3rd, 4th, and 5th grade, were asked to read derived words in a sentence context. Target words were nouns derived from noun bases (e.g., umorista, ‘humorist’), which in Italian are shared by few derived words, and nouns derived from verb bases (e.g., punizione, ‘punishment’), which are shared by about 50 different inflected forms and several derived words. Data shows that base and word frequency affected first-fixation duration for nouns derived from noun bases, but in an opposite way: base frequency had a facilitative effect on first fixation, whereas word frequency exerted an inhibitory effect. These results were interpreted as a competition between early accessed base words (e.g., camino, chimney) and target words (e.g., caminetto, fireplace). For nouns derived from verb bases, an inhibitory base frequency effect but no word frequency effect was observed. These results suggest that syntactic context, calling for a noun in the target position, lead to an inhibitory effect when a verb base was detected, and made it difficult for readers to access the corresponding base+suffix combination (whole word) in the very early processing phases. Gaze duration was mainly affected by word frequency and length: for nouns derived from noun bases, this interaction was modulated by proficiency, as length effect was stronger for less proficient readers, while they were processing low-frequency words. For nouns derived from verb bases, though, all children, irrespective of their reading ability, showed sensitivity to the interaction within frequency of base+suffix combination (word frequency) and target length. Results of this study are consistent with those of other Italian studies that contrasted noun and verb processing, and confirm that distributional properties of morphemic constituents have a significant impact on the strategies used for processing morphologically complex words.
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- 2018
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12. Selection Processing in Noun and Verb Production in Left- and Right-Sided Parkinson's Disease Patients
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Sonia Di Tella, Francesca Baglio, Monia Cabinio, Raffaello Nemni, Daniela Traficante, and Maria C. Silveri
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Parkinson's disease (PD) ,executive functions ,word production ,magnetic resonance imaging ,Inferior Frontal Gyrus (IFG) ,Broca's area ,Psychology ,BF1-990 - Abstract
Verbs are more difficult to produce than nouns. Thus, if executive resources are reduced as in Parkinson's disease (PD), verbs are penalized compared to nouns. However, in an experimental condition in which it is the noun that must be selected from a larger number of alternatives compared to the verb, it is the noun production that becomes slower and more prone to errors. Indeed, patients are slower and less accurate than normal subjects when required to produce nouns from verbs (VN) in a morphology derivation tasks (e.g., “osservazione” from “osservare”) [“observation” from “observe”] than verbs from nouns in a morphology generation task, in which only a verb can be generated from the noun (NV) (e.g., “fallire” from “fallimento”) [“to fail” from “failure”]. In the Italian language morphology, in fact, generation and derivation tasks differ in the number of lexical entries among which the response must be selected. The left Inferior Frontal Gyrus (IFG) has been demonstrated to be involved in selection processes. In the present study, we explored if the ability to select words is related to the cortical thickness of the left IFG. Twelve right-sided PD with nigrostriatal hypofunctionality in the left hemisphere (RPD-LH), 9 left-sided PD with nigrostriatal hypofunctionality in the right hemisphere (LPD-RH) and 19 healthy controls (HC) took part in the study. NV and VN production tasks were administered; accuracy and reaction times (RTs) were collected. All 40 subjects received a structural MRI examination. Cortical thickness of the IFG and volumetric measurements for subcortical regions, thought to support selection processes, were computed using FreeSurfer. In VN derivation tasks RPD-LH patients were less accurate than LPD-RH patients (accuracy: 66% vs. 77%). No difference emerged among the three groups in RTs. Task accuracy/RTs and IFG thickness showed a significant correlation only in RPD-LH. Not only nouns (as expected) but also verbs were correlated with cortical thickness. This suggests that the linguistic nature of the stimuli along with executive resources are both relevant during word selection processes. Our data confirm that executive resources and language interact in the left IFG in word production tasks.
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- 2018
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13. Reading Derived Words by Italian Children With and Without Dyslexia: The Effect of Root Length
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Cristina Burani, Stefania Marcolini, Daniela Traficante, and Pierluigi Zoccolotti
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word length ,reading ,orthographic depth ,transparent orthography ,children ,dyslexia ,Psychology ,BF1-990 - Abstract
Children with dyslexia are extremely slow at reading long words but they are faster with stimuli composed of roots and derivational suffixes (e.g., CASSIERE, ‘cashier’) than stimuli not decomposable in morphemes (e.g., CAMMELLO, ‘camel’). The present study assessed whether root length modulates children’s morphological processing. For typically developing readers, root activation was expected to be higher for longer than shorter roots because longer roots are more informative access units than shorter ones. By contrast, readers with dyslexia were not expected to be facilitated by longer roots because these roots might exceed dyslexics’ processing capacities. Two groups of Italian 6th graders, with and without dyslexia, read aloud low-frequency derived words, with familiar roots and suffixes. Word reaction times (RTs) and mispronunciations were recorded. Linear mixed-effects regression analyses on RTs showed the inhibitory effect of word length and the facilitating effect of root frequency for both children with and without dyslexia. Root length predicted RTs of typically developing readers only, with faster RTs for longer roots, over and above the inhibitory effect of word length. Furthermore, typically developing children had faster RTs on words with more frequent suffixes while children with dyslexia were faster when roots had a small family size. Generalized linear regression analyses on accuracy showed facilitating effects of word frequency and suffix frequency, for both groups. The large word length effect on latencies confirmed laborious whole-word processing in children when reading low-frequency derived words. The absence of a word frequency effect along with the facilitating effect of root frequency indicated morphemic processing in all readers. The reversed root length effect in typically developing readers pointed to a stronger activation for longer roots in keeping with the idea that these represent particularly informative units for word decoding. For readers with dyslexia the facilitating effect of root frequency (not modulated by root length) confirmed a pervasive benefit of root activation while the lack of root length modulation indicated that the longest roots were for them too large units to be processed within a single fixation.
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- 2018
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14. Literacy abilities and well-being in children: Findings from the application of EUREKA, the Italian adaptation of the RAVE-O Program
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Daniela Traficante, Valentina Andolfi, and Maryanne Wolf
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learning difficulties ,RTI approach ,multicomponent intervention programs for language improvement ,well-being experience and school achievement ,dificoltà lettura e scrittura ,approccio RTI ,Education - Abstract
This study presents the programs RAVE-O (Reading, Automaticity, Vocabulary, Engagement-Orthography) by M. Wolf and its Italian adaptation EUREKA (EnthUsiasm, ResEarch, CApacity). They are aimed at improving literacy in children through activities promoting engagement in written language processing. Data from an experimental research on the application of EUREKA show that this training has positive effects not only on literacy, but also on child’s well-being, in general and in school context. Abilità di lettura e benessere nei bambini: primi risultati dell’applicazione di EUREKA, adattamento italiano del programma RAVE-O In questo lavoro viene illustrato il RAVE-O (Reading, Automaticity, Vocabulary, Engagement-Orthography) di M. Wolf, un programma finalizzato al potenziamento delle abilità di lettura e scrittura attraverso attività, da svolgersi in piccolo gruppo, che stimolano il coinvolgimento attivo dei bambini nell’apprendimento del linguaggio scritto. Viene poi presentato uno studio sperimentale sull’adattamento italiano EUREKA (EntUsiasmo, RicErca, CApacità) (Traficante, 2017), che mostra l’efficacia dell’intervento non solo sull’apprendimento del linguaggio scritto, ma anche sull’esperienza di benessere generale del bambino e, in particolare, nel contesto scolastico.
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- 2017
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15. Measuring the need for cognition: Structural analysis and measurement of invariance of the short version of the Need for Cognition Scale in Italian adolescents
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Lombardi, Elisabetta, Aloi, Emanuele, Tarchi, Christian, Traficante, Daniela, Elisabetta Lombardi (ORCID:0000-0001-8930-8770), Emanuele Aloi, Daniela Traficante (ORCID:0000-0002-6861-1452), Lombardi, Elisabetta, Aloi, Emanuele, Tarchi, Christian, Traficante, Daniela, Elisabetta Lombardi (ORCID:0000-0001-8930-8770), Emanuele Aloi, and Daniela Traficante (ORCID:0000-0002-6861-1452)
- Abstract
This study aims to adapt and validate the Need for Cognition Scale – Short Version (NFCS; Cacioppo & Petty, 1982) in Italian adolescents. This instrument measures individual differences in the motivation and enjoyment in being involved in effortful cognitive activities. The Italian version of the scale, translated and adapted from the original version, is composed of 18 items and was administered to secondary school students. The confirmatory factorial analysis proved that the scale had two correlated factors measuring two different dimensions of motivations, namely approach and avoidance of effortful cognitive activities. The scale is also invariant for gender and for the administration measurement (on-line and paper-pencil). Results also indicated that the NFCS had good reliability indices and satisfactory convergent and discriminant validity. Thanks to its good psychometric properties, the Need for Cognition Scale has been proven to be a useful tool in both educational and research areas
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- 2023
16. The facial emotion recognition deficit in Parkinson’s disease: Implications of a visual scanning strategy
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Nicoletta Ciccarelli, Isabella Anzuino, Fulvio Pepe, Eugenio Magni, Daniela Traficante, and Maria Caterina Silveri
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Facial Expression ,facial emotion recognition ,Neuropsychology and Physiological Psychology ,emotional valence ,Settore M-PSI/02 - PSICOBIOLOGIA E PSICOLOGIA FISIOLOGICA ,Parkinson's disease ,Emotions ,Humans ,visual scanning ,Parkinson Disease ,oculomotor impairment ,Neuropsychological Tests ,Facial Recognition - Abstract
We explored the relationship between a visual scanning strategy and a facial emotion recognition deficit in Parkinson's disease (PD).Thirty nondemented PD patients (balanced for symptom side at onset) and 20 age, education and gender-matched healthy controls (HC) were enrolled. The PD group underwent a comprehensive neuropsychological battery also exploring the executive functions. In both groups, eye movements were recorded while subjects categorized facial emotion from Ekman's 60-faces test. We were particularly interested in the location of fixations on facial pictures (top vs. bottom) and in emotional valence (positive vs. negative). We also compared performance of the two groups on a verbal emotion attribution task.Compared to HC, PD patients performed worse on visual recognition of negative emotions such as anger, fear, and sadness (where the upper part of the face is more informative than the lower part); the two groups did not differ on the verbal emotion attribution task. HC modified their visual scanning strategy (both number and overall time duration of fixations) according to the valence of the emotion; by contrast, PD showed the same pattern regardless of the valence. In the PD group, accuracy in the visual recognition of negative emotions and fixation pattern correlated with performance on tasks exploring executive functions; however, no associations were observed with severity of motor state.Our results suggest that visual scanning strategy contributes significantly to the facial emotion recognition deficit of PD patients, especially at a "high level" related to cognitive control of eye movements. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2022 APA, all rights reserved).
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- 2022
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17. Learning and Well-Being in Multilingual Adolescents with Italian as L2: A Comparison with Monolingual Peers with and without a Learning Disorder
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Roberta Bettoni, Mirta Vernice, Marta Tironi, Elisabetta Lombardi, Ilaria Offredi, Marisa Giorgetti, Maria Luisa Lorusso, Daniela Sarti, Daniela Traficante, Bettoni, R, Vernice, M, Tironi, M, Lombardi, E, Offredi, I, Giorgetti, M, Lorusso, M, Sarti, D, and Traficante, D
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Settore M-PSI/04 - PSICOLOGIA DELLO SVILUPPO E PSICOLOGIA DELL'EDUCAZIONE ,L2 adolescents ,Renewable Energy, Sustainability and the Environment ,Geography, Planning and Development ,school inclusion ,reading skill ,reading skills ,Building and Construction ,Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law ,L2 adolescent ,school climate - Abstract
The current exploratory study aimed to offer a description of the learning skills and well-being of multilingual adolescents with Italian as L2, a population regarded as vulnerable with respect to their academic achievements and psychosocial profile. We compared the performance of L2 participants with that of their monolingual peers with and without Specific Learning Disorders on a range of tests and questionnaires to define their learning skills and well-being within the school context. Results confirm greater reading difficulties in the L2 group compared to monolingual peers with Specific Learning Disorders. This pilot study offers one of the first investigations into the learning skills and well-being of a scarcely studied population, namely L2 adolescents. Additionally, it discusses practices that can be implemented within the classroom to promote inclusion.
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- 2023
18. Lateralized reading in the healthy brain: A behavioral and computational study on the nature of the visual field effect
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Rolando, Bonandrini, Eraldo, Paulesu, Daniela, Traficante, Elena, Capelli, Marco, Marelli, Claudio, Luzzatti, Bonandrini, R, Paulesu, E, Traficante, D, Capelli, E, Marelli, M, and Luzzatti, C
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Behavioral Neuroscience ,Divided visual field paradigm ,Naïve discriminative learning ,Reading ,Settore M-PSI/02 - PSICOBIOLOGIA E PSICOLOGIA FISIOLOGICA ,Lexical decision ,Cognitive Neuroscience ,Hemispheric asymmetry ,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology ,M-PSI/02 - PSICOBIOLOGIA E PSICOLOGIA FISIOLOGICA - Abstract
Despite its widespread use to measure functional lateralization of language in healthy subjects, the neurocognitive bases of the visual field effect in lateralized reading are still debated. Crucially, the lack of knowledge on the nature of the visual field effect is accompanied by a lack of knowledge on the relative impact of psycholinguistic factors on its measurement, thus potentially casting doubts on its validity as a functional laterality measure. In this study, an eye-tracking-controlled tachistoscopic lateralized lexical decision task (Experiment 1) was administered to 60 right-handed and 60 left-handed volunteers and word length, orthographic neighborhood, word frequency, and imageability were manipulated. The magnitude of visual field effect was bigger in right-handed than in left-handed participants. Across the whole sample, a visual field-by-frequency interaction was observed, whereby a comparatively smaller effect of word frequency was detected in the left visual field/right hemisphere (LVF/RH) than in the right visual field/left hemisphere (RVF/LH). In a subsequent computational study (Experiment 2), efficient (LH) and inefficient (RH) activation of lexical orthographic nodes was modelled by means of the Naïve Discriminative Learning approach. Computational data simulated the effect of visual field and its interaction with frequency observed in the Experiment 1. Data suggest that the visual field effect can be biased by word frequency. Less distinctive connections between orthographic cues and lexical/semantic output units in the RH than in the LH can account for the emergence of the visual field effect and its interaction with word frequency. Remarkably, the size of the interaction between the visual field effect and word frequency did not differ in the two hand preference groups, suggesting that psycholinguistic factors don't hamper the measurement of interindividual differences in the functional lateralization of language.
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- 2023
19. Telerehabilitation and Wellbeing Experience in Children with Special Needs during the COVID-19 Pandemic
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Elisabetta Lombardi, Elisa Granocchio, Daniela Traficante, Daniela Sarti, Marinella De Salvatore, and Emanuela Pagliano
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Gerontology ,Telemedicine ,cerebral palsy ,Social distance ,media_common.quotation_subject ,education ,Special needs ,medicine.disease ,Pediatrics ,Article ,RJ1-570 ,Cerebral palsy ,Settore M-PSI/04 - PSICOLOGIA DELLO SVILUPPO E PSICOLOGIA DELL'EDUCAZIONE ,specific learning disorders ,well-being ,Perception ,Scale (social sciences) ,Telerehabilitation ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,medicine ,Specific Learning Disorder ,Psychology ,telerehabilitation ,media_common - Abstract
Social distancing due to the COVID-19 pandemic represented a golden opportunity to implement telerehabilitation for clinical groups of children. The present study aims to show the impact that telerehabilitation had on the experience of well-being of children with special needs being treated at the Foundation IRCCS Neurological Institute ‘C. Besta’ in Milan (Specific Learning Disorders and Cerebral Palsy diagnosis), it aims to do so by comparing it with experiences of those who did not undertake telerehabilitation despite the diagnosis during the pandemic, and with typically developing children. Results show that the three groups differed in the Support, Respect and Learning dimensions of well-being experience. Post hoc comparisons revealed that children with Specific Learning Disorders and Cerebral Palsy scored higher than normotypical children in Support and in Respect scales. Furthermore, children who experienced telerehabilitation showed the highest scores on the Learning scale in comparison with the other two groups. These results support the importance of reorganizing care and assistance by integrating telemedicine, which seems to have fostered a positive experience of well-being in people with special needs, particularly in the perception of a supportive environment that respects psychological needs.
- Published
- 2021
20. L’insegnamento degli strumenti di assessment psicologico: una prima esplorazione nella comunità accademica italiana
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Guido, Alessandri, Filippo, Aschieri, Bobbio, Andrea, Roberta, Daini, Fiorenzo, Laghi, Nucci, Massimo, Laura, Parolin, Daniela, Traficante, and Lis, Adriana
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Assessment psicologico, Test, Colloquio, Comunità accademica italiana ,Test ,Assessment psicologico ,Comunità accademica italiana ,Colloquio - Published
- 2021
21. Risposta ai commenti
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Guido, Alessandri, Filippo, Aschieri, Bobbio, Andrea, Roberta, Daini, Fiorenzo, Laghi, Nucci, Massimo, Laura, Parolin, Daniela, Traficante, and Lis, Adriana
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Test ,Comunità accademica italiana ,Colloquio ,Assessment ,Assessment, Test, Colloquio, Comunità accademica italiana - Published
- 2021
22. Bilinguismo e disturbi dell'apprendimento del linguaggio scritto
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Boerchi, D, Valtolina, G, Traficante, Daniela, Paini, Martina, Marinelli, Chiara Valeria, Daniela Traficante (ORCID:0000-0002-6861-1452), Chiara Valeria Marinelli, Boerchi, D, Valtolina, G, Traficante, Daniela, Paini, Martina, Marinelli, Chiara Valeria, Daniela Traficante (ORCID:0000-0002-6861-1452), and Chiara Valeria Marinelli
- Abstract
Il contributo affronta la problematica della rilevazione di eventuali disturbi dell'apprendimento del linguaggio scritto (dislessia, disortografia) in bambini bilingui. Di fronte a questi studenti vi è infatti sempre il rischio di sottovalutare difficoltà, che vengono ascritte al bilinguismo, oppure di considerare come indicatori di disturbo specifico di apprendimento delle difficoltà dovute alla minore esposizione alla lingua italiana. L'utilizzo di strumenti di valutazione standardizzati sulla popolazione italiana rischia infatti di rilevare molti 'falsi positivi', in quanto i livelli di competenza linguistica raggiunti dai bambini bilingui sono spesso inferiori a quelli dei coetanei monolingui, pur in assenza di disturbi specifici. Il capitolo offre indicazioni agli insegnanti e agli specialisti per poter rilevare e valutare in un modo più adeguato le traiettorie evolutive dei bambini bilingui.
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- 2021
23. BAS3. British Ability Scales 3. Manuale tecnico.
- Author
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Elliott, Colin D., Smith, Pauline, Traficante, Daniela, Assunta Zanetti, Maria, Bonanomi, Andrea, Andolfi, Valentina, Daniela Traficante (ORCID:0000-0002-6861-1452), Andrea Bonanomi (ORCID:0000-0003-2857-1430), Elliott, Colin D., Smith, Pauline, Traficante, Daniela, Assunta Zanetti, Maria, Bonanomi, Andrea, Andolfi, Valentina, Daniela Traficante (ORCID:0000-0002-6861-1452), and Andrea Bonanomi (ORCID:0000-0003-2857-1430)
- Abstract
Le BAS3 sono il risultato di più di 40 anni di ricerca, condotta presso l’Università di Manchester e, parallelamente, negli Stati Uniti; nel Regno Unito, esse costituiscono uno strumento di riferimento fondamentale per la diagnosi dei disturbi del neurosviluppo. Ora disponibili anche nell’adattamento italiano, le BAS3 forniscono la possibilità di valutare il livello di abilità del bambino in un’ampia gamma di funzioni dominio-generali (linguaggio, ragionamento, abilità visuo-spaziale, memoria, velocità di elaborazione) e dominio-specifiche (lettura, scrittura, calcolo). L’utilizzo del modello psicometrico dell’Item Response Theory permette un’elevata flessibilità nella scelta degli item da somministrare, in funzione dell’abilità del bambino, per ottenere misure valide e attendibili anche per bambini che presentano caratteristiche atipiche, sia al di sotto che al di sopra di quanto atteso per la loro età cronologica.
- Published
- 2021
24. BAS3: British Ability Scales 3. Manuale di somministrazione e scoring.
- Author
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Elliott, Colin D., Smith, Pauline, Traficante, Daniela, Assunta Zanetti, Maria, Bonanomi, Andrea, Andolfi, Valentina, Daniela Traficante (ORCID:0000-0002-6861-1452), Andrea Bonanomi (ORCID:0000-0003-2857-1430), Elliott, Colin D., Smith, Pauline, Traficante, Daniela, Assunta Zanetti, Maria, Bonanomi, Andrea, Andolfi, Valentina, Daniela Traficante (ORCID:0000-0002-6861-1452), and Andrea Bonanomi (ORCID:0000-0003-2857-1430)
- Abstract
Le BAS3 sono il risultato di più di 40 anni di ricerca, condotta presso l’Università di Manchester e, parallelamente, negli Stati Uniti; nel Regno Unito, esse costituiscono uno strumento di riferimento fondamentale per la diagnosi dei disturbi del neurosviluppo. Ora disponibili anche nell’adattamento italiano, le BAS3 forniscono la possibilità di valutare il livello di abilità del bambino in un’ampia gamma di funzioni dominio-generali (linguaggio, ragionamento, abilità visuo-spaziale, memoria, velocità di elaborazione) e dominio-specifiche (lettura, scrittura, calcolo). L’utilizzo del modello psicometrico dell’Item Response Theory permette un’elevata flessibilità nella scelta degli item da somministrare, in funzione dell’abilità del bambino, per ottenere misure valide e attendibili anche per bambini che presentano caratteristiche atipiche, sia al di sotto che al di sopra di quanto atteso per la loro età cronologica.
- Published
- 2021
25. Uncinate fasciculus and word selection processing in Parkinson's disease
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Monia Cabinio, Raffaello Nemni, Maria Caterina Silveri, Francesca Baglio, Laura Pelizzari, Sonia Di Tella, and Daniela Traficante
- Subjects
Left and right ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Diffusion parameters ,Settore M-PSI/02 - PSICOBIOLOGIA E PSICOLOGIA FISIOLOGICA ,Cognitive Neuroscience ,Parkinson's disease ,Uncinate fasciculus ,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology ,Verb ,Audiology ,050105 experimental psychology ,03 medical and health sciences ,Behavioral Neuroscience ,0302 clinical medicine ,Noun ,Subject (grammar) ,Fractional anisotropy ,medicine ,Selection (linguistics) ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,05 social sciences ,Parkinson Disease ,White Matter ,Diffusion Tensor Imaging ,DTI ,Anisotropy ,Word production ,Nerve Net ,Psychology ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Diffusion MRI - Abstract
We explored with Diffusion Tensor Imaging (DTI) technique whether the ability to select words among competitive alternatives during word production is related to the integrity of the left uncinate fasciculus (UF) in Parkinson's disease (PD). Nineteen PD patients (10 right-sided and 9 left-sided) and 17 matched healthy controls (HC) took part in the study. Participants were asked to derive nouns from verbs (reading from to read) or to generate verbs from nouns (to build from building). Noun and verb production, in this task, differ in the number of lexical entries among which the response is selected, as the noun must be selected from a larger number of alternatives compared to the verb, and thus is more demanding of processing resources. DTI evaluation was obtained for each subject. Fractional anisotropy (FA) and mean diffusivity (MD) maps were derived from DTI and median FA and MD values were computed within the left and right UF. Then, FA and MD of the left and right UF were correlated with noun and verb production. Both the left and right UF-FA correlated with the global (noun + verb) production and noun production in the whole PD group. In right-sided PD, correlations were found with the contralateral UF-FA; in left-sided PD the correlations emerged with both the left and right UF-FA. The most difficult task, noun production, significantly correlated with the right UF-FA in left-sided PD. The left UF is involved in word selection processes, and the right UF intervenes when the selection is particularly demanding of attentional resources.
- Published
- 2020
26. Word and pseudoword superiority effects: Evidence from a shallow orthography language
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Enrico Ripamonti, Daniela Traficante, Pierluigi Zoccolotti, Claudio Luzzatti, Ripamonti, E, Luzzatti, C, Zoccolotti, P, and Traficante, D
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Physiology ,Reicher-Wheeler paradigm, Word Superiority Effect, Pseudoword Superiority Effect, Written Word Frequency, Grain Size Theory, Dual-Route model ,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology ,M-PSI/02 - PSICOBIOLOGIA E PSICOLOGIA FISIOLOGICA ,Vocabulary ,050105 experimental psychology ,Reicher-Wheeler paradigm ,Word Superiority Effect ,Pseudoword Superiority Effect ,Written Word Frequency ,Grain Size Theory ,Dual-Route model ,Young Adult ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Physiology (medical) ,dual-route model ,grain size theory ,pseudoword superiority effect ,reicher-wheeler paradigm ,word superiority effect ,written word frequency ,Reaction Time ,Settore M-PSI/01 - PSICOLOGIA GENERALE ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,General Psychology ,Language ,Psycholinguistics ,Word superiority effect ,05 social sciences ,General Medicine ,Crowding ,Linguistics ,Semantics ,Pseudoword ,Neuropsychology and Physiological Psychology ,Pattern Recognition, Visual ,Reading ,Female ,M-PSI/01 - PSICOLOGIA GENERALE ,Psychology ,Photic Stimulation ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Word (computer architecture) ,Orthography ,Coding (social sciences) - Abstract
The word superiority effect (WSE) denotes better recognition of a letter embedded in a word rather than in a pseudoword. Along with WSE, also a pseudoword superiority effect (PSE) has been described: It is easier to recognise a letter in a legal pseudoword than in an unpronounceable nonword. At the current state of the art, both WSE and PSE have been mainly tested with English speakers. This study uses the Reicher–Wheeler paradigm with native speakers of Italian (a shallow orthography language). Different from English and French, we found WSE for reaction times (RTs) only, whereas PSE was significant for both accuracy and RTs. This finding indicates that in the Reicher–Wheeler task, readers of a shallow orthography language can effectively rely on both the lexical and the sublexical routes. As to the effect of letter position, a clear advantage for the first-letter position emerged, a finding suggesting a fine-grained processing of the letter strings with coding of letter position and indicating the role of visual acuity and crowding factors.
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- 2018
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27. Child Abuse Potential Inventory: sviluppo di una versione breve
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Daniela Traficante, Paola Di Blasio, Sarah Miragoli, and Elena Camisasca
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Health (social science) ,Social Psychology ,Prevention ,05 social sciences ,Parental skills ,CAP Inventory ,Settore M-PSI/04 - PSICOLOGIA DELLO SVILUPPO E PSICOLOGIA DELL'EDUCAZIONE ,Child physical abuse ,Risk assessment ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,050902 family studies ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,0509 other social sciences ,050104 developmental & child psychology - Abstract
Una versione breve del Child Abuse Potential (CAP) Inventory e stata sviluppata usando un gruppo di 102 genitori non maltrattanti e un gruppo aggiuntivo di 37 genitori maltrattanti. Gli item sono stati selezionati massimizzando: (a) la discriminativita rispetto alla condizione di maltrattamento rilevato da parte dei Servizi Sociali; (b) la predittivita rispetto al punteggio totale della forma originale; (c) la stabilita fattoriale; (d) la validita clinica degli item selezionati. I punteggi ottenuti con una scala di 17 item mostrano una coerenza interna di .70, una struttura fattoriale stabile a 6 fattori e una significativa correlazione con il punteggio originale della Abuse Scale (r = .86). Inoltre, il punteggio della scala breve mantiene un adeguato pattern di correlazioni con altri strumenti riferiti alla funzione genitoriale. Pertanto, la versione breve del CAP Inventory puo essere considerata un utile e rapido strumento di screening per la valutazione del rischio di maltrattamento infantile.
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- 2017
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- View/download PDF
28. Word Morphology and Written Language Acquisition: Insights From Typical and Atypical Development in Different Orthographies
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Daniela Traficante, Lynne G. Duncan, and Maximiliano A. Wilson
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Literacy skill ,morphological awareness training ,Reading and writing ,lcsh:BF1-990 ,Dyslexia ,Morphology (biology) ,cross-linguistic perspective ,medicine.disease ,developmental dyslexia ,Linguistics ,lcsh:Psychology ,Editorial ,Settore M-PSI/04 - PSICOLOGIA DELLO SVILUPPO E PSICOLOGIA DELL'EDUCAZIONE ,Morpheme ,medicine ,Developmental dyslexia ,Psychology ,Written language ,General Psychology ,Word (computer architecture) ,Orthography ,literacy skills ,Word morphology - Published
- 2019
29. The Impact of School Climate on Well-Being Experience and School Engagement: A Study With High-School Students
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Roberta Bettoni, Mirta Vernice, Ilaria Offredi, Marisa Giorgetti, Elisabetta Lombardi, Daniela Traficante, Lombardi, E, Traficante, D, Bettoni, R, Offredi, I, Giorgetti, M, and Vernice, M
- Subjects
School climate ,Adolescent ,Positive education ,education ,lcsh:BF1-990 ,Well-being ,Dysfunctional family ,050105 experimental psychology ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Psychology ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,adolescents ,Big Five personality traits ,Path analysis (statistics) ,Personality trait ,General Psychology ,Original Research ,Engagement ,Flourishing ,05 social sciences ,lcsh:Psychology ,Settore M-PSI/04 - PSICOLOGIA DELLO SVILUPPO E PSICOLOGIA DELL'EDUCAZIONE ,personality traits ,school climate, well-being, engagement, adolescents, personality traits ,School engagement ,Social psychology ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
The aim of this work is to contribute to the identification of the factors which can promote students’ engagement at school and support flourishing in young people. According to the Positive Education (Seligman, 2011), there is a strong relationship between school environment and student’s well-being. Fatou and Kubiszewski (2018) found that the quality of the school climate perceived by the students influences engagement in school activities. In this study, 153 students (M = 67) attending 10th grade were presented with tests and questionnaires to assess individual assets (personality traits, literacy skills), emerging appraisals (school-climate, well-being experience) and emerging actions (school engagement), according to the Student Well-Being Model proposed by Soutter et al., (2014). Path analysis showed that the best model includes neither individual assets nor direct effect of school climate on engagement, as the effect of school climate on engagement is mediated by well-being experience. In other words, school climate has been confirmed as an important factor to be considered to improve engagement in school activities, but it is effective only when its influence can modify the well-being experience of the students. These results support the perspective of Positive Education, as intervention on school environment is expected to exert positive effects not only on students’ well-being, but also on their engagement in school activities and learning, irrespective to students’ assets. Therefore, improving school climate means to support well-being experience and to reduce dropout risk also in students with learning difficulties and with personality traits, which might lead to dysfunctional behaviors. This work encourages working in/with schools to implement positive education programs that support and sustain a positive school climate and culture for school-community well-being.
- Published
- 2019
30. The role of reading skills and word features in reading derived nouns: an eye-movement study with primary-school children
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Traficante, Daniela, Marelli, Marco, Luzzatti, Claudio, Daniela Traficante (ORCID:0000-0002-6861-1452), Traficante, Daniela, Marelli, Marco, Luzzatti, Claudio, and Daniela Traficante (ORCID:0000-0002-6861-1452)
- Abstract
Several studies proved that detecting morphemic constituents in long strings of letters leads to a reduction of latency and of error rates in reading aloud derived nouns and pseudo-derived non-words. Such effects are particularly evident in children with dyslexia, who struggle to process long stimuli as a whole. In this study we used eye-movement recording to get evidence of the complex interplay between base- and whole-word processing in reading aloud derived nouns. Sixty-two typically developing children, attending 3rd, 4th, and 5th grade, were asked to read derived words in a sentence context. Target words were 41 nouns derived from noun bases (e.g., umorista, ‘humorist’). Data showed that base and word frequency affected early phases of word processing (first fixation duration), but in an opposite way: Base frequency had a facilitative effect on first fixation, whereas word frequency exerted an inhibitory effect. These results were interpreted as a competition between early accessed base words (e.g., camino, ‘chimney’) and target words (e.g., caminetto, ‘fireplace’). Such competition has been still observed in the later stages of processing (gaze duration) only for children with low level of reading proficiency (more than 2 SD below norms). In these children, the higher base frequency is, the longer the gaze duration. Data on first fixation duration confirms that base word works as an effective head start; however, results from gaze duration suggest that, for children with low-proficiency, difficulty in accessing base+suffix combination can slow down whole-word production.
- Published
- 2019
31. THE IMPACT OF SCHOOL CLIMATE ON WELL-BEING EXPERIENCE AND SCHOOL ENGAGEMENT: A STUDY WITH HIGH- SCHOOL STUDENTS
- Author
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Lombardi, Elisabetta, Traficante, Daniela, Bettoni, Roberta, Offredi, Ilaria, Giorgetti, Marisa, Vernice, Mirta, Elisabetta Lombardi (ORCID:0000-0001-8930-8770), Daniela Traficante (ORCID:0000-0002-6861-1452), Marisa Giorgetti (ORCID:0000-0001-7003-700X), Lombardi, Elisabetta, Traficante, Daniela, Bettoni, Roberta, Offredi, Ilaria, Giorgetti, Marisa, Vernice, Mirta, Elisabetta Lombardi (ORCID:0000-0001-8930-8770), Daniela Traficante (ORCID:0000-0002-6861-1452), and Marisa Giorgetti (ORCID:0000-0001-7003-700X)
- Abstract
The aim of this work is to investigate the factors promoting students’ engagement at school and supporting their well-being experience. According to the Positive Education there is a strong relationship between school environment and student’s well-being. Moreover, the quality of the school climate perceived by the students was found to influence engagement in school activities, as well. In this study, 153 students (M = 67) attending 10th grade were presented with tests and questionnaires to assess individual assets (personality traits, literacy skills), emerging appraisals (school-climate, well-being experience) and emerging actions (school engagement), according to the Student Well-Being Model. Path analysis showed that the best model does include neither individual assets nor direct effect of school climate on engagement, as the effect of school climate on engagement is mediated by well-being experience. The main result is that school climate has been confirmed as an important factor to be considered to improve engagement in school activities, but it is effective only when its influence can modify the well-being experience of the students. Moreover, the lack of significant effects of individual assets in the model suggests that improving school climate means to support well-being experience and, indirectly school engagement, irrespective to learning abilities and personality traits. This work encourages working in/with schools to implement positive education programs that support and sustain a positive school climate and culture for school-community wellbeing.
- Published
- 2019
32. Tell Me a Story: Socio-Emotional Functioning, Well-Being and Problematic Smartphone Use in Adolescents With Specific Learning Disabilities
- Author
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Sarti, Daniela, Bettoni, Roberta, Offredi, Ilaria, Tironi, Marta, Lombardi, Elisabetta, Traficante, Daniela, Luisa Lorusso, Maria, Elisabetta Lombardi (ORCID:0000-0001-8930-8770), Daniela Traficante (ORCID:0000-0002-6861-1452), Sarti, Daniela, Bettoni, Roberta, Offredi, Ilaria, Tironi, Marta, Lombardi, Elisabetta, Traficante, Daniela, Luisa Lorusso, Maria, Elisabetta Lombardi (ORCID:0000-0001-8930-8770), and Daniela Traficante (ORCID:0000-0002-6861-1452)
- Abstract
Although Specific Learning Disabilities (SLD) are described as specific difficulties in one or more academic areas, often socio-emotional problems are also reported to be related to well-being and school engagement. Moreover, recent evidence shows that emotional problems and reduced social support predict problematic use of new technologies, such as a smartphone, that can, in turn, increase these problems. In this study, we aimed to investigate socio-emotional functioning and its relation to well- being, school engagement, and problematic smartphone use. Social and emotional skills of 19 adolescents with a diagnosis of SLD and 19 control adolescents were assessed through a narrative test; adolescents were requested to narrate complete stories elicited by pictures representing social situations. Information on well-being and problematic smartphone use were collected through questionnaires. The comparison between groups showed differences in cognitive-social skills, although no significant differences in emotional functioning were found. Additionally, the perception of the social environment as supportive and trustworthy was related to general well-being for both groups, whereas the perception of limits and rules set by the adult world appeared to be related to a decreased investment in learning processes only for the SLD students. Finally, correlation analysis showed that smartphone use was associated with reduced perception of social support and to a decreased ability to understand and solve social situations. These results assert the critical role played by social information processing and social support in terms of well-being in adolescence, and contribute to enhancing knowledge of the mechanisms underlying problematic smartphone use in a clinical sample.
- Published
- 2019
33. Beyond grammatical category: The role of distributional properties of Italian language in processing nouns and verbs
- Author
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Sulpizio, S, Barca, L, Primativo, S, Arduino, LS, Traficante, Daniela, Luzzatti, Claudio, Silveri, Maria Caterina, Daniela Traficante (ORCID:0000-0002-6861-1452), Maria Caterina Silveri (ORCID:0000-0001-5012-0682), Sulpizio, S, Barca, L, Primativo, S, Arduino, LS, Traficante, Daniela, Luzzatti, Claudio, Silveri, Maria Caterina, Daniela Traficante (ORCID:0000-0002-6861-1452), and Maria Caterina Silveri (ORCID:0000-0001-5012-0682)
- Abstract
This contribution offers an overview on the main studies carried out on the difference between verb and noun processing in adults and children. This topic will be discussed, in particular, according to the perspective we proposed in collaboration with Cristina Burani, focused on the role of language distributional properties in word processing. This issue has been developed in the last 20 years by assessing differences between words with small inflectional family size, i.e. nouns and adjectives (which in Italian can be inflected in 2-4 word forms), and words with large inflectional family size, i.e. verbs (which can be inflected in up to 50 different word forms). This comparison was made through several tasks (lexical decision, progressive de-masking, reading aloud, a grammatical-class switching task, picture naming) and in different populations, i.e. skilled adult readers, adults with aphasia, adults with Parkinson’s Disease, typically developing children and children with dyslexia. In all these studies we found that verb bases are more likely to be processed as base + suffix combination, and are usually associated with slower RTs and lower accuracy than noun bases. Neuroimaging techniques, used in some of these studies, showed that different brain areas are activated in noun and verb processing, as verb recognition seems to involve selection and inhibition mechanisms that are not detected in the case of noun processing. As for nouns, both whole-word and base-word representations seem to be available and their activation is mainly affected by word- and base-frequency, respectively. Overall, data from these studies suggests that the difference between nouns and verbs can depend not only on grammatical, syntactic, and semantic features, but also on the different morphological family size, which might determine difficulty in selection and inhibition processes.
- Published
- 2019
34. Word moprhology and written language acquisition:insights from typical and atypical development in different orthographies
- Author
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Duncan, Lynne G., Traficante, Daniela, Augustin Wilson, Maximiliano, Daniela Traficante (ORCID:0000-0002-6861-1452), Duncan, Lynne G., Traficante, Daniela, Augustin Wilson, Maximiliano, and Daniela Traficante (ORCID:0000-0002-6861-1452)
- Abstract
By gathering together a body of work, across a range of orthographies, on the relationship between morphological processing and reading acquisition, an overview of the development of this relationship begins to emerge. The articles in this research topic offer insights into the relationship between morphological processing and semantics, that take account of the typicality of the acquisition process and the nature and depth of the orthography in question.
- Published
- 2019
35. Se io fossi Ben: adolescenti a confronto con una ipotetica gravidanza
- Author
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Andrea Bonanomi, Daniela Traficante, Emanuela Confalonieri, and Maria Giulia Olivari
- Subjects
interruzione di gravidanza ,060103 classics ,Health (social science) ,060102 archaeology ,unplanned pregnancy ,06 humanities and the arts ,adolescenti maschi ,abortion ,processo decisionale ,decision making ,electronic role playing simulation ,simulazione role playing computerizzata ,adolescent males ,Settore M-PSI/04 - PSICOLOGIA DELLO SVILUPPO E PSICOLOGIA DELL'EDUCAZIONE ,0601 history and archaeology ,gravidanza non pianificata ,Applied Psychology - Abstract
Scopo del presente contributo e quello di esplorare, tramite una simulazione role-playing computerizzata, l’atteggiamento di un campione di adolescenti maschi (N = 125; eta media = 16.87) in merito ad una ipotetica gravidanza non pianificata. Tre sono gli obiettivi: (1) descrivere le reazioni emotive e cognitive degli adolescenti e la scelta da loro presa rispetto alla gravidanza; (2) individuare gli atteggiamenti degli adolescenti nei confronti della genitorialita adolescenziale e della relazione con la partner; (3) valutare il ruolo giocato dai seguenti fattori nel predire la scelta di proseguire o meno la gravidanza: (a) atteggiamenti personali nei confronti della genitorialita adolescenziale e della relazione con la partner, (b) attribuzione di importanza agli aspetti positivi e negativi della prosecuzione della gravidanza e dell’interruzione volontaria di gravidanza, (c) percezione dell’atteggiamento genitoriale nei confronti della gravidanza non pianificata. I risultati mettono in luce la presenza di tre atteggiamenti nei confronti della genitorialita adolescenziale e della relazione con la partner: idealizzazione della genitorialita, rifiuto dell’impegno e riflessione sull’evento. L’idealizzazione della genitorialita e il rifiuto dell’impegno, l’attribuzione di importanza agli aspetti positivi e negativi di interrompere la gravidanza, un atteggiamento genitoriale favorevole alla gravidanza e un atteggiamento materno di aperto sostegno giocano un ruolo rilevante nel guidare il processo decisionale rispetto a tale evento.
- Published
- 2016
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36. Familial risk and protective factors affecting CPS professionals’ child removal decision: A decision tree analysis study
- Author
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Sarah Miragoli, Daniela Traficante, Elena Camisasca, Serena Grumi, Paola Di Blasio, and Luca Milani
- Subjects
Sociology and Political Science ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Decision tree ,Education ,Intervention (counseling) ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Judgment analysis ,Child maltreatment ,media_common ,Operationalization ,Specific-information ,05 social sciences ,050301 education ,Familial risk ,Placement decision ,Protective factors ,Risk factors ,Safety assessment ,Settore M-PSI/04 - PSICOLOGIA DELLO SVILUPPO E PSICOLOGIA DELL'EDUCAZIONE ,Child protection ,Psychology ,0503 education ,Autonomy ,050104 developmental & child psychology ,Clinical psychology - Abstract
CPS (Child Protection Services) workers are required to assess the level of safety of referred minors and to identify the best intervention to protect them. CPS workers’ decision making, in particular the child removal decision, has been the focus of a growing number of studies in order to identify which factors influence workers’ evaluation. The present study aimed to investigate both familial and mother/father-related risk and protective factors that influenced CPS workers’ decision about the child placement through the “judgment analysis” approach. We analyzed 340 social records of families referred to CPS due to child maltreatment were retrospectively analyzed on the basis of the Protocol of risk and Protective factors ( Di Blasio, 2005 ). The mean age of the mothers was 36.85 (SD = 7.61; range = 17–58), while the mean age of the fathers was 41.86 (SD = 8.85; range = 21–72). The mean age of the children was 8.37 (SD = 4.87; range = 0–17), the 48.8% of them were males. To identify the most relevant factors for the discrimination of high- and low-risk cases (operationalized as child out-of-home placement vs monitoring and parental abilities support), 3 decision tree analyses (C&RT) models were tested. Results of our research seem to indicate that workers attribute great importance to autonomy and independence of parents: when this factor is absent, the likelihood of child removal from the family is higher. Results also indicate that workers attribute different weight to specific information cues, when they characterize either the maternal or the paternal role. We speculate that in the future, decision tree models can help CPS professionals in processing the information collected during psycho-social investigations of at-risk families.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Word selection processing in Parkinson's disease: When nouns are more difficult than verbs
- Author
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Cristina Burani, Federica Sarchioni, Maria Caterina Silveri, Maria Rita Lo Monaco, Daniela Traficante, and Laura Iori
- Subjects
Male ,Morphology ,Settore M-PSI/02 - PSICOBIOLOGIA E PSICOLOGIA FISIOLOGICA ,Cognitive Neuroscience ,Parkinson's disease ,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology ,Verb ,Class (philosophy) ,Neuropsychological Tests ,Vocabulary ,Dysexecutive syndrome ,Word selection processing ,050105 experimental psychology ,Task (project management) ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Noun ,Selection (linguistics) ,Reaction Time ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Set (psychology) ,Parkinson's disease Word selection processing Morphology Verbs Dysexecutive syndrome ,Aged ,Language ,05 social sciences ,Parkinson Disease ,Middle Aged ,Linguistics ,Neuropsychology and Physiological Psychology ,Verbs ,Female ,Word Processing ,Psychology ,Adjective ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Patients with Parkinson's disease (PD) are impaired in verb production. Interpretations range from grammatical deficits to semantic-conceptual decay of action representation. The verb production deficit in PD can also be considered a dysexecutive disorder, specifically, a deficit of selection processing during word production, due to corticostriatal damage. Producing verbs is "more difficult" than producing nouns, because verb-forms must be selected from a large set of word-forms which share the verb-root, and the set of possible verb-forms is larger than the set of possible noun-forms when a noun has to be produced. However, if we devise a condition in which a noun must be selected from a set of alternatives larger than the set of alternative forms from which a verb must be selected, we expect an opposite pattern, with nouns becoming more difficult than verbs. We used morphological tasks varying in the number of alternative responses during word production. Fourteen PD patients and 14 healthy Controls participated in the study. Participants performed a noun-from-verb ('observation' from 'to observe') and a noun-from adjective derivation task ('kindness' from 'kind'), and a verb-from-noun ('to observe' from 'observation') and an adjective-from-noun generation task ('kind' from 'kindness'). Input-stimuli were presented singularly on a screen and participants produced the response as fast as possible. Response latencies were longer in derivation tasks (several alternative responses) than in generation tasks (one possible response), irrespective of the grammatical class of the target word, with no difference between groups. PD patients were significantly less accurate than Controls only in the noun-from-verb derivation task, that is, in the task with the highest number of alternative responses (PD: 60%; Controls: 81%). Results suggest that the verb production disorder in PD patients may reflect disturbed selection processes among competitors: the higher the number of alternative responses the more severe the impairment.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Processi di selezione del verbo e del nome in pazienti con malattia di Parkinson con differente prevalenza di lato
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Società Italiana di Psicologia dell’invecchiamento, Di Tella, Sonia, Francesca, Baglio, Monia, Cabinio, Raffaello, Nemni, Traficante, Daniela, Silveri, Maria Caterina, Di Tella , Sonia (ORCID:0000-0002-2248-5120), Daniela Traficante (ORCID:0000-0002-6861-1452), Maria Caterina Silveri (ORCID:0000-0001-5012-0682), Società Italiana di Psicologia dell’invecchiamento, Di Tella, Sonia, Francesca, Baglio, Monia, Cabinio, Raffaello, Nemni, Traficante, Daniela, Silveri, Maria Caterina, Di Tella , Sonia (ORCID:0000-0002-2248-5120), Daniela Traficante (ORCID:0000-0002-6861-1452), and Maria Caterina Silveri (ORCID:0000-0001-5012-0682)
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I pazienti con malattia di Parkinson (MP) mostrano un deficit nella produzione del verbo come possibile espressione di una disfunzione esecutiva nei processi di selezione di parole. Tuttavia, in una condizione in cui il nome deve essere selezionato tra un numero maggiore di alternative rispetto al verbo, la produzione del nome diventa più lenta e meno accurata. Il Giro Frontale Inferiore sinistro (GFIs) appare cruciale nei processi di selezione. Nel presente studio esploriamo se l’abilità nei processi di selezione di nomi e verbi è correlata allo spessore corticale del GFIs in pazienti con MP. Nove pazienti con MP destra-danno emisferico sinistro (MPD-ES), 7 pazienti con MP sinistra-danno emisferico destro (MPS-ED) e 16 controlli sani hanno eseguito compiti morfologici che differiscono per numero di alternative tra cui la risposta deve essere selezionata: derivare nomi da verbi (VN), [“osservazione” da “osservare”] e generare verbi da nomi (NV) [“fallire” da “fallimento”]. Sono stati registrati accuratezza e tempi di reazione (TR). I 32 soggetti hanno ricevuto anche un esame di RM strutturale. Lo spessore corticale del GFI è stato determinato usando FreeSurfer. Nella produzione VN i pazienti MPD-ES mostrano minore accuratezza rispetto ai pazienti MPS-ED (58% vs. 74%). Inoltre, accuratezza e TR correlano con lo spessore corticale del GFI solo nei MPD-ES e solo con il GFIs, non solo per la produzione del nome ma anche del verbo. I risultati suggeriscono che il deficit di selezione emerge in funzione della difficoltà del compito in presenza di una disfunzione del GFIs, coerentemente con l'ipotesi che la produzione di parole richiede di risolvere una competizione tra più alternative. Tuttavia, non solo la richiesta di risorse esecutive, ma anche la natura linguistica degli stimoli è rilevante nei processi di selezione. Risorse esecutive e linguaggio interagiscono nel GFIs nei processi di selezione di parole e confermano il ruolo del GFIs nella produzione linguist
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- 2018
39. Potenziare le abilità di lettura e scrittura per stare bene a scuola: effetti del programma Eureka sul benessere dei bambini
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Molina, P, Macagno, A, Nirchio, P, Traficante, Daniela, Andolfi, Valentina Rita, Wolf, Maryanne, Daniela Traficante (ORCID:0000-0002-6861-1452), Valentina R. Andolfi (ORCID:0000-0002-1980-9366), Molina, P, Macagno, A, Nirchio, P, Traficante, Daniela, Andolfi, Valentina Rita, Wolf, Maryanne, Daniela Traficante (ORCID:0000-0002-6861-1452), and Valentina R. Andolfi (ORCID:0000-0002-1980-9366)
- Abstract
Introduzione: I bambini con difficoltà di lettura e scrittura spesso hanno scarsa fiducia nelle proprie capacità, bassa motivazione e bassa autostima e temono di essere coinvolti nelle attività scolastiche, anticipando il proprio fallimento (Graham et al., 2012; Mason et al., 2012). Inoltre, le abilità di lettura e scrittura influenzano lo status sociale e l'immagine che il bambino acquisisce all'interno della classe (Andolfi et al., 2015; Cornoldi e De Beni, 2001; Mugnaini et al., 2009). Il presente studio mira a valutare se EUREKA (EntUsiasmo, RicErca e CApacità) (Traficante, 2017), adattamento italiano del programma di potenziamento linguistico RAVE-O (Reading, Automaticity, Vocabulary, Engagement-Orthography) (Wolf et al., 2000), sia in grado non solo di migliorare le abilità di lettura e scrittura dei bambini, ma anche la loro esperienza di benessere, in quanto il programma propone un contesto che permette loro di sentirsi competenti e fare esperienza di autoefficacia nelle attività scolastiche, sviluppando relazioni positive e sentimenti di appartenenza al gruppo dei pari. Metodo:Partecipanti: 60 bambini italiani (78.3% maschi) di II classe primaria con punteggi ai test di lettura e/o scrittura inferiori a -0.5 z. Strumenti: sono state utilizzate le CPM (Raven, 1965), le Prove di lettura MT (Cornoldi e Colpo, 2006), il test CEO (Bozzo et al., 2003), il CIT-Child (Andolfi et al., 2017), il QBS (Tobia e Marzocchi, 2015). Procedura. Dopo l’assessment preliminare (T0), sono stati individuati tre gruppi di 20 bambini ciascuno, pareggiati per età, genere, abilità di lettura e scrittura, punteggi di benessere. Nella fase T1 (14 settimane), il gruppo A (Controllo) non ha ricevuto alcun trattamento, il gruppo B si è esercitato con il software iWinABC, il gruppo C ha partecipato al programma EUREKA. Nella fase T2 sono stati applicati tutti gli strumenti utilizzati nella fase T0 (tranne le CPM). Risultati:I risultati ottenuti tramite ANOVA miste, con un fattore
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- 2018
40. The role of the left Inferior Frontal Gyrus in word selection processing in left- and right-sided Parkinson disease patients
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Di Tella, Sonia, Baglio, Francesca, Cabinio, Monia, Nemni, Raffaello, Traficante, Daniela, Silveri, Maria Caterina, Sonia Di Tella (ORCID:0000-0002-2248-5120), Daniela Traficante (ORCID:0000-0002-6861-1452), Maria Caterina Silveri (ORCID:0000-0001-5012-0682), Di Tella, Sonia, Baglio, Francesca, Cabinio, Monia, Nemni, Raffaello, Traficante, Daniela, Silveri, Maria Caterina, Sonia Di Tella (ORCID:0000-0002-2248-5120), Daniela Traficante (ORCID:0000-0002-6861-1452), and Maria Caterina Silveri (ORCID:0000-0001-5012-0682)
- Abstract
AIMS: Patients with Parkinson’s Disease (PD) show a verb production deficit. Different hypotheses have been advanced, morphological difficulties of verbs compared to nouns, as well as degradation of action representation. However, in an experimental condition in which nouns must be selected from a larger set of alternatives, Silveri et al. (2018) found that nouns became more difficult to produce, probably for the dysexecutive disorder related to the fronto-striatal damage typical of PD. Neuroimaging studies suggest that the left Inferior Frontal Gyrus (IFG) is crucial in the word selection processes. The purpose of the present study was to explored if the ability to select words is related to the cortical thickness of the left IFG. MATERIALS: Twelve right-sided PD with nigrostriatal hypofunctionality in the left hemisphere (RPD-LH), 9 left-sided PD with nigrostriatal hypofunctionality in the right hemisphere (LPD-RH) and 19 healthy controls (HC) were asked to produce nouns and verbs in derivation and generation morphology tasks. METHODS: Participants were requested to produce Nouns from Verbs (VN: ‘osservazione’ from ‘osservare’) [‘observation’ from ‘to observe’], a morphology derivation task in which nouns must be selected from a set of alternatives larger, and to generate Verbs from Nouns (NV: ‘fallire’ from ‘fallimento’) [‘to fail’ from ‘failure’], a morphology generation task with only one alternative. Both accuracy and RTs were collected. All subjects received a structural MRI examination. Cortical thickness for IFG subregions and volumetric measurements for subcortical regions (caudate, putamen, pallidus) were computed using FreeSurfer. Non-parametric analyses were carried out on accuracy and RTs, to assess differences among the three groups in the two tasks. Partial correlations were computed between NV and VN tasks and thickness of cortical regions. RESULTS: RPD-LH patients were less accurate than LPD-RH patients in the VN derivation task (accuracy: 66 % vs.
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- 2018
41. Selection Processing in Noun and Verb Production in Left- and Right-Sided Parkinson's Disease Patients
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Di Tella, Sonia, Baglio, Francesca, Cabinio, Monia, Nemni, Raffaello, Traficante, Daniela, Silveri, Maria Caterina, Sonia Di Tella (ORCID:0000-0002-2248-5120), Daniela Traficante (ORCID:0000-0002-6861-1452), Maria Caterina Silveri (ORCID:0000-0001-5012-0682), Di Tella, Sonia, Baglio, Francesca, Cabinio, Monia, Nemni, Raffaello, Traficante, Daniela, Silveri, Maria Caterina, Sonia Di Tella (ORCID:0000-0002-2248-5120), Daniela Traficante (ORCID:0000-0002-6861-1452), and Maria Caterina Silveri (ORCID:0000-0001-5012-0682)
- Abstract
Verbs are more difficult to produce than nouns. Thus, if executive resources are reduced as in Parkinson's disease (PD), verbs are penalized compared to nouns. However, in an experimental condition in which it is the noun that must be selected from a larger number of alternatives compared to the verb, it is the noun production that becomes slower and more prone to errors. Indeed, patients are slower and less accurate than normal subjects when required to produce nouns from verbs (VN) in a morphology derivation tasks (e.g., “osservazione” from “osservare”) [“observation” from “observe”] than verbs from nouns in a morphology generation task, in which only a verb can be generated from the noun (NV) (e.g., “fallire” from “fallimento”) [“to fail” from “failure”]. In the Italian language morphology, in fact, generation and derivation tasks differ in the number of lexical entries among which the response must be selected. The left Inferior Frontal Gyrus (IFG) has been demonstrated to be involved in selection processes. In the present study, we explored if the ability to select words is related to the cortical thickness of the left IFG. Twelve right-sided PD with nigrostriatal hypofunctionality in the left hemisphere (RPD-LH), 9 left-sided PD with nigrostriatal hypofunctionality in the right hemisphere (LPD-RH) and 19 healthy controls (HC) took part in the study. NV and VN production tasks were administered; accuracy and reaction times (RTs) were collected. All 40 subjects received a structural MRI examination. Cortical thickness of the IFG and volumetric measurements for subcortical regions, thought to support selection processes, were computed using FreeSurfer. In VN derivation tasks RPD-LH patients were less accurate than LPD-RH patients (accuracy: 66% vs. 77%). No difference emerged among the three groups in RTs. Task accuracy/RTs and IFG thickness showed a significant correlation only in RPD-LH. Not only nouns (as expected) but also verbs were correlated with cortical
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- 2018
42. Multiple patterns of dyslexia in a shallow orthography: Principles for a diagnostic screening of developmental dyslexias
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Claudio Luzzatti, Gabriella Rizzi, Daniela Traficante, Naama Friedmann, Traficante, D, Friedmann, N, Rizzi, G, and Luzzatti, C
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assessment ,peripheral dyslexias ,050105 experimental psychology ,03 medical and health sciences ,Behavioral Neuroscience ,0302 clinical medicine ,M-PSI/04 - PSICOLOGIA DELLO SVILUPPO E PSICOLOGIA DELL'EDUCAZIONE ,dyslexia ,medicine ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Diagnostic screening ,Biological Psychiatry ,05 social sciences ,Dyslexia ,medicine.disease ,cognitive models of reading ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Settore M-PSI/04 - PSICOLOGIA DELLO SVILUPPO E PSICOLOGIA DELL'EDUCAZIONE ,Neuropsychology and Physiological Psychology ,Neurology ,dual-route model of reading ,subtypes of developmental dyslexia ,Psychology ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Orthography ,Cognitive psychology - Published
- 2017
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43. Multiple patterns of dyslexia in a shallow orthography: Principles for a diagnostic screening of developmental dyslexias.
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Traficante, Daniela, Friedmann, Naama, Rizzi, Gabriella, Luzzatti, Claudio, Daniela Traficante (ORCID:0000-0002-6861-1452), Traficante, Daniela, Friedmann, Naama, Rizzi, Gabriella, Luzzatti, Claudio, and Daniela Traficante (ORCID:0000-0002-6861-1452)
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Dyslexia is a term that refers to a variety of reading impairments, each resulting from damage to a different component of the reading model. This view is common in the study of acquired dyslexias, but is less accepted in the realm of developmental dyslexia. In this study we examine whether we can identify various types of developmental dyslexia (Friedmann & Coltheart, in press) in Italian readers, by using a reading test that includes stimuli that are sensitive to the various types of dyslexia. The new test is aimed to detect not only surface, deep, and phonological developmental dyslexias, but also dyslexias that result from a deficit of the orthographic-visual analyzer, which involves three main processing units: letter identification, letter position detection, and letter-to-word binding (Ellis & Young, 1988). METHOD Participants. 262 primary school children (from 2nd to 5th grade) were assessed (50% Male). Materials. We developed and administered a new reading test that includes lists of 165 words, 40 nonwords, and 25 word pairs, created to detect the various types of dyslexia. A specific coding scheme for the classification of reading errors was developed (adapted from the TILTAN battery: (Friedmann & Gvion, 2003). In addition, we ran standard measures of reading skills (Cornoldi & Colpo, 2006; Zoccolotti et al. , 2005). Analysis. Poor readers (N = 52; 20%) and skilled readers (N= 210) were identified on the basis of the standard measures. An analysis of error types was carried out on the skilled readers’ performance, to obtain normative profiles for each grade. RESULTS Accuracy for skilled readers was 90%, and 75% for poor readers. The agreement between standard tests and the new assessment procedure in identifying poor readers was 94%: The new diagnostic assessment detected 11 poor readers who were not identified with the usual diagnostic procedure. In Italian skilled readers, all expected types of errors were found. Percentage distributions of errors for wo
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- 2017
44. EUREKA. Adattamento italiano del RAVE-O di Maryanne Wolf
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Traficante, Daniela, Daniela Traficante (ORCID:0000-0002-6861-1452), Traficante, Daniela, and Daniela Traficante (ORCID:0000-0002-6861-1452)
- Abstract
L’individuazione precoce di traiettorie di sviluppo atipiche (dislessia, disortografia e disgrafia) e l’implementazione di interventi mirati a ridurre le difficoltà di apprendimento (non riconducibili a veri e propri disturbi specifici) non solo possono promuovere le abilità scolastiche, ma consentono anche di prevenire il disagio, sostenendo autoefficacia, motivazione allo studio e autostima (Arsa & Sibelia, 2013). Il testo presenta un intervento educativo, EUREKA (EntUsiasmo, RicErca, CApacità), fondato su modelli cognitivi e psicolinguistici, per il potenziamento delle abilità di lettura e scrittura da implementare nel gruppo classe o nel piccolo gruppo secondo i principi del cooperative learning. Il training consiste in attività di potenziamento della sensibilità alle proprietà distribuzionali della lingua (segmenti ortografici, rime, morfemi, parole) e mira a sviluppare strategie metacognitive per la comprensione del testo. Le modalità di conduzione del gruppo sono finalizzate anche al sostegno della motivazione e del senso di autoefficacia nell’apprendimento della lettura e della scrittura. In particolare, il programma educativo EUREKA e l’originale da cui deriva, in lingua inglese, RAVE-O (Reading, Automaticity, Vocabulary, Engagement-Orthography) (Wolf, Miller e Donnelly, 2000), danno risalto non solo alla fonologia, ma anche a componenti linguistiche quali il lessico e la semantica, fornendo strumenti e strategie appropriate per migliorare le capacità di lettura e scrittura (Wolf et al., 2009). L’idea centrale intorno a cui è stato costruito il programma è che più informazioni il bambino possiede su una parola (cioè, fonemi, sequenze ortografiche, significati, usi sintattici e struttura morfologica), più velocemente la parola viene decodificata, recuperata e compresa. La struttura delle lezioni varia, ma include sempre strategie volte a migliorare il recupero rapido delle parole, tra cui l'esplorazione di pattern ortografici comuni e dei relat
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- 2017
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