209 results on '"Bonifacci, P"'
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2. Socioeconomic status, linguistic skills and language background differentially relate to preschoolers’ emotional and behavioural profile
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Paola Bonifacci, Viola Ravaldini, Martina Cangelosi, and Valentina Tobia
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Language ,Socioeconomic status ,Heritage bilinguals ,Emotions ,Peer relationships ,Prosocial behaviour ,Pediatrics ,RJ1-570 ,Psychiatry ,RC435-571 - Abstract
Abstract Background Proximal and distal factors interact to shape children’s development and well-being. The present study aimed to examine socioeconomic status (SES), linguistic skills, and language background as concurrent predictors of socio-emotional and behavioural outcomes in heritage bilingual and monolingual children attending preschool. Methods Parents of 1810 children (mean age = 63.42 months ± 7.36), attending preschool in Italy, completed the Four Factor Index of SES and the Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire (SDQ). Teachers (n = 99) completed a questionnaire on children’s linguistic skills and emotional and behavioural profiles. A subsample of 995 children was administered an expressive vocabulary task in Italian. Results Regression analyses showed that linguistic skills were the only concurrent predictor of conduct problems, as well as the dominant predictor of hyperactivity/impulsivity, peer problems, and better prosocial behaviour. SES was negatively related to ADHD traits, peer problems, and prosocial behaviour. Finally, heritage bilingualism background was associated, although not as a primary predictor, with increased emotional problems, peer relationship problems, and lower teacher-rated emotional and behavioural skills. However, it was the main factor positively associated with prosocial behaviour. Conclusions The implications of these findings for research in this area and for educational policy are discussed, highlighting the need for a multidimensional perspective that includes linguistic skills and SES in the assessment of children’s emotional and behavioural outcomes.
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- 2024
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3. Parents’ and Children’s Emotional Well-Being and Language Beliefs in Heritage Bilingual Families
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Paola Bonifacci, Claudia Borghetti, and Martina Cangelosi
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multilingualism ,well-being ,parents ,children ,beliefs ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 ,Psychology ,BF1-990 - Abstract
The present study aimed to examine how parents’ psychological characteristics and positive beliefs about multilingualism predict children’s emotional well-being in 51 multilingual families with an immigrant background. Parents were interviewed to assess their beliefs about multilingualism and completed a battery of questionnaires assessing depression, anxiety, psychological distress, parental competence, quality of life, and acculturative stress. They also completed the Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire (SDQ), which assessed their children’s socio-emotional and behavioral characteristics. The results from regression analyses showed that parents’ depressive symptoms were significant concurrent predictors of children’s conduct problems. In contrast, higher acculturation stress was associated with more emotional problems and better prosociality in children, although the stronger predictor for the latter variable was parents’ self-efficacy. Positive beliefs about bilingualism were not related to children’s well-being. The discussion highlights the importance of targeting parents’ depressive traits and acculturation stress as possible risk factors for children’s emotional and behavioral problems. Conversely, fostering parental self-efficacy may promote children’s prosociality.
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- 2024
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4. Spelling and Writing Skills in Minority-Language Bilingual Children Exposed to a Transparent Orthography: Multilevel Profiles and Concurrent Predictors
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Alexandra Affranti, Valentina Tobia, Stephanie Bellocchi, and Paola Bonifacci
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Many studies have explored how Language-Minority Bilingual Children (LMBC) read and comprehend, while the way they learn to spell and write has received less attention. This study aimed to assess a comprehensive profile of spelling and writing skills in LMBC, comparing performances of 4th and 5th grade bilingual (n = 74) and monolingual (n = 131) children in word and nonword reading and multilevel spelling and writing tasks (word, nonword and passage dictation, and written narrative production). Furthermore, we explored the role of linguistic and cognitive predictors (nonverbal Intellectual Quotient, verbal knowledge, morphosyntactic comprehension, nonword repetition) in spelling and writing outcomes. Our findings showed that, overall, LMBC did not reach a monolingual-like proficiency in spelling by the end of primary school, while they were similar to monolinguals in reading tasks and were able to produce written narratives with adequate macrostructure, syntactic complexity, and lexical variety. Moreover, morphosyntactic comprehension predicted spelling in both groups. Nonverbal intelligence and verbal knowledge predicted spelling skills only for the bilingual group. With regards to writing skills, morphosyntactic comprehension emerged as a predictor exclusively in the bilingual group. These results are discussed with reference to educational and clinical implications.
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- 2024
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5. Disentangling the Impact of Bilingualism and SES in Literacy Skills of Language-Minority Bilingual Children and Monolingual Peers Exposed to French
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Stéphanie Bellocchi and Paola Bonifacci
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In the present study, we aimed to disentangle the impact of bilingualism and socioeconomic status (SES) on literacy in language-minority bilingual children (LMBC) and monolinguals exposed to French. We also wanted to explore the role of these two factors on cognitive and language skills, i.e., verbal knowledge (VK), morphosyntactic comprehension (MC), and phonological short-term memory (PSTM), well known to be important predictors of literacy acquisition. We compared LMBC with low and medium-high SES, and monolinguals with low and medium-high SES. All the children attended Grades 3, 4, and 5. We found that LMBC underperformed monolinguals on VK and MC. Low SES children showed lower scores compared to medium-high SES children on VK, MC, and PSTM. With regard to literacy, LMBC underperformed monolinguals on text and irregular word reading. Low SES children underperformed medium-high SES children only in regular word reading and pseudoword spelling. As a whole, bilingualism had an effect on measures involving lexical components, while SES had a more widespread effect on cognitive and language skills. The results are discussed considering implications for research, clinical, and educational settings.
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- 2024
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6. A longitudinal study of math skills in heritage bilingual children: profiles of strengths and weaknesses
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Bonifacci, Paola, Serena, Baraldi, Codeluppi, Francesca, and Peri, Benedetta
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- 2025
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7. Socioeconomic status, linguistic skills and language background differentially relate to preschoolers’ emotional and behavioural profile
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Bonifacci, Paola, Ravaldini, Viola, Cangelosi, Martina, and Tobia, Valentina
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- 2024
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8. Home Activities and Cognitive Skills in Relation to Early Literacy and Numeracy: Testing a Multifactorial Model in Preschoolers
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Bonifacci, Paola, Trambagioli, Nicole, Bernabini, Luca, and Tobia, Valentina
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The aim of the present study was to test environmental and cognitive variables as possible cross-domain predictors of early literacy and numeracy skills. One hundred forty-eight preschool children (mean age = 64.36 months ± 3.33) were enrolled in the study. The battery included a home literacy and home numeracy questionnaire, measures and phonological and visuo-spatial working memory, tasks tapping response inhibition, and predictors of literacy (vocabulary, phonological awareness, letter knowledge) and numeracy (magnitude comparison, number knowledge) skills. The structural equation model indicated that verbal working memory and, to a lesser extent, inhibition represented cross-domain predictors, whereas home numeracy activities and visuo-spatial working memory explained additional variance only for early numeracy skills. Implications for parents and educators are discussed.
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- 2022
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9. Text-to-Speech Applications to Reduce Mind Wandering in Students with Dyslexia
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Bonifacci, Paola, Colombini, Elisa, Marzocchi, Michele, Tobia, Valentina, and Desideri, Lorenzo
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Background: Mind wandering--that is, a shift in the contents of thought away from an ongoing task--can have detrimental consequences for students' reading comprehension. To date, no evidence is available on the effects of text-to-speech solutions on rates of mind wandering during reading. Objectives: The study aimed to evaluate the effects of text-to-speech technology on frequency of mind wandering and reading comprehension in young students with dyslexia (20) and typical development (50). Methods: Students were presented, on a personal computer, texts and comprehension questions in two modalities: self-paced silent reading and text-to-speech reading. Comprehension scores and mind wandering occurrence were considered. A battery of cognitive tasks and questionnaires on mind wandering and emotional traits was also included. Results: There were no differences in baseline rates of mind wandering between the two groups. In the text-to-speech condition, both groups showed better reading comprehension and reduced rates of mind wandering. Students with dyslexia were significantly more on task in the text-to-speech condition compared to the self-paced reading condition. Implications: These results suggest that text-to-speech might represent a reading solution that allows students with Dyslexia to diminish mind wandering during text-to-speech reading.
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- 2022
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10. The relationship between mind wandering and reading comprehension: A meta-analysis
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Bonifacci, Paola, Viroli, Cinzia, Vassura, Chiara, Colombini, Elisa, and Desideri, Lorenzo
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- 2023
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11. Editorial: The impact of home and school environment on early literacy and mathematic skills
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Paola Bonifacci, Valentina Tobia, Tomohiro Inoue, and George Manolitsis
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home literacy ,home numeracy ,environmental factors ,socioeconomic status ,bilingualism ,Psychology ,BF1-990 - Published
- 2023
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12. How Parents’ Perceived Value of the Heritage Language Predicts Their Children’s Skills
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Martina Cangelosi, Claudia Borghetti, and Paola Bonifacci
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family language policy ,heritage speakers ,language development ,language acquisition ,multilingual children ,Language and Literature - Abstract
The growing field of family language policies (FLPs), defined as overt and explicit planning in relation to language use among family members, has garnered increasing interest. FLPs influence child–caretaker interactions and are closely linked to child language development and acquisition. This study investigates the impact of FLPs on children’s proficiency in their heritage language (HL). Employing a multi-method approach, we conducted semi-structured interviews with 53 multilingual parents to explore their beliefs, ideologies, and language management within the family context. Concurrently, their children were administered standardized tasks in their heritage language (HL) to assess receptive vocabulary skills and morphosyntactic comprehension. Our findings indicate that parents’ perceived value of the HL significantly correlates with their children’s language performance, going beyond the influence of reported domestic language usage.
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- 2024
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13. Magnitude Comparisons, Number Knowledge and Calculation in Very Preterm Children and Children with Specific Learning Disability: A Cross-Population Study Using Eye-Tracking
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Guarini, Annalisa, Tobia, Valentina, Bonifacci, Paola, Faldella, Giacomo, and Sansavini, Alessandra
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Difficulties in mathematics have been described in very preterm children, but their origins are not well understood and may differ from other populations with specific learning disability. Very preterm children, children with learning disability, and typically developing children were compared in mathematics skills, using standardized tools, experimental tasks, and eye-tracker measures. We assessed symbolic and nonsymbolic magnitude comparisons, number knowledge, calculation, as well as cognitive skills of 103 Italian-speaking fourth and fifth graders. Compared to typically developing peers, very preterm children showed delays in number knowledge, slower reaction times in nonsymbolic magnitude comparisons, and an atypical gaze exploration characterized by more and shorter fixations that lacked a target preference. The profile of mathematics skills of very preterm children appeared different from that of children with learning disability. Although both populations showed mainly preserved cognitive skills and slower reaction times in nonsymbolic magnitude comparisons, children with specific learning disability showed more severe impairments in calculation and were slower in symbolic magnitude comparisons, compared to very preterm children. Including eye-tracking measures in preterm follow-up programs and planning tailored interventions are recommended.
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- 2021
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14. Intergenerational Features of Math Skills: Symbolic and Non-Symbolic Magnitude Comparison and Written Calculation in Mothers and Children
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Bernabini, Luca, Tobia, Valentina, and Bonifacci, Paola
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In this article, we analyze symbolic and non-symbolic numerical abilities of parents in order to understand whether these are predictors of children's numerical skills, considering basic symbolic, non-symbolic, and formal math skills (i.e., written calculation). A battery of cognitive and math tasks was administered to a sample of 83 children with established formal school experience (i.e., fourth and fifth grade students), and to their mothers. Correlational and regression analyses were performed. The results evidenced significant relationships between children's and mothers' symbolic and math skills, but children's symbolic comparison skills were the most significant predictor of their math skills. The study suggests that the intergenerational features of math skills play a significant role in children's numerical development but that children's math skills ultimately depend mainly on their own numerical processing. Within an educational perspective, the development of symbolic number skills in children is crucial and might allow the constraints of intergenerational transmission of math skills to be reduced.
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- 2021
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15. Look Back at Text or Rely on Memory? Efficacy of Reading Comprehension Strategies in Good and Poor Oral Comprehenders
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Tobia, Valentina and Bonifacci, Paola
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Background: Reading comprehension is a multifactorial process, but one of its features has been relatively under-investigated--it is the strategy used when answering reading comprehension questions. In order to find the correct answer, children can either respond to questions about a text relying on their text memory or look back at the written text. This study analyses (i) which strategy, memory or look-back is more frequently adopted in primary school children according to grade level and type of text (expository vs narrative) and (ii) the preferred (most frequently used) and more efficient (higher number of correct responses) strategy for poor oral comprehenders. Poor oral comprehenders were selected for having adequate nonword decoding skills but impaired oral comprehension, compared with good oral comprehenders. Methods: The total sample comprised 1,417 primary school children. A standardised test assessing reading and comprehension of oral and written language was administered. Results: In the comparison among children attending different grades, older children showed a more frequent use of the look-back strategy for the expository text, whereas no age-related difference emerged for the narrative text. Poor oral comprehenders (n = 88) showed a different pattern, compared with matched good oral comprehenders (n = 88), for both preference and efficiency of strategies. Despite having a globally poorer performance in reading comprehension, poor oral comprehenders were more accurate than good oral comprehenders when using the look-back strategy. Conclusions: The complex pattern of results obtained reinforces the idea that intervention strategies should be personalised based on individual characteristics and specific for the type of task and text.
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- 2020
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16. Which Measures Better Discriminate Language Minority Bilingual Children with and without Developmental Language Disorder? A Study Testing a Combined Protocol of First and Second Language Assessment
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Bonifacci, Paola, Atti, Elena, Casamenti, Martina, Piani, Barbara, Porrelli, Marina, and Mari, Rita
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Purpose: This study aimed to assess a protocol for the evaluation of developmental language disorder (DLD) in language minority bilingual children (LMBC). The specific aims were (a) to test group differences, (b) to evaluate the discriminant validity of single measures included in the protocol, and (c) to define which model of combined variables had the best results in terms of efficacy and efficiency. Method: Two groups of LMBC were involved, one with typical development (n = 35) selected from mainstream schools and one with DLD (n = 20). The study protocol included the collection of demographic information and linguistic history; a battery of standardized tests in their second language (Italian), including nonword repetition, morphosyntactic comprehension and production, and vocabulary and narrative skills; and direct (children's evaluation) and indirect (parents' questionnaire) assessment of linguistic skills in their first language. Results: Results showed that the two groups differed in almost all linguistic measures. None of the single measures reached good specificity/sensitivity scores. A combined model that included direct and indirect assessment of first language skills, morphosyntactic comprehension and production, and nonword repetition reached good discriminant validity, with 94.5% of cases correctly classified. Discussion: The study defines a complex picture of the linguistic profile in bilingual children with DLD, compared to typically developing bilingual peers. The results reinforce the idea that no single measure can be considered optimal in distinguishing children with DLD from typical peers. The study offers a concrete example of an effective and efficient protocol with which to discriminate LMBC with and without DLD.
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- 2020
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17. Literacy Skills in Bilinguals and Monolinguals with Different SES
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Bonifacci, Paola, Lombardo, Giuseppina, Pedrinazzi, Jessica, Terracina, Francesco, and Palladino, Paola
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This study compared language minority bilingual (LMB) second graders with two groups of monolingual peers (with comparable low SES or with high SES) in a set of literacy skills (reading fluency, spelling, reading and oral comprehension) tested in the target school language (L2 for bilinguals). The aim was to disentangle the roles of bilingualism and SES in the literacy skills of LMB children. The LMB group appeared comparable to both monolingual groups in reading fluency. However, both the reading comprehension and spelling of bilinguals in the target language were weaker compared to both monolingual groups. Monolinguals and bilinguals with low SES underperformed compared to the high-SES group in oral comprehension. These results confirm previous evidence that reading fluency is a well-acquired literacy skill for low-SES bilinguals, whereas reading comprehension in L2 represents a weakness in their profile. The study adds insights into the difficulties encountered by LMB children in spelling tasks, filling a gap in the previous literature. Finally, oral comprehension seems to be more related to SES than to home language.
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- 2020
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18. The Mind in the Machine: Mind Perception Modulates Gaze Aversion During Child–Robot Interaction
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Desideri, Lorenzo, Bonifacci, Paola, Croati, Giulia, Dalena, Angelica, Gesualdo, Maria, Molinario, Gianfelice, Gherardini, Arianna, Cesario, Lisa, and Ottaviani, Cristina
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- 2021
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19. Mind Wandering, Together with Test Anxiety and Self-Efficacy, Predicts Student's Academic Self-Concept but Not Reading Comprehension Skills
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Desideri, Lorenzo, Ottaviani, Cristina, Cecchetto, Carla, and Bonifacci, Paola
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Background: Mind wandering (MW) has commonly been linked to bad scholastic performance; however, such association has rarely been investigated in the classroom. Moreover, in examining such association, motivational variables have been largely ignored. Aim: We aimed at examining the associations between the dispositional tendency to engage in MW and a series of reading comprehension skills and measures of academic self-concept above and beyond the role of sex, age, test anxiety, self-efficacy, and self-regulation strategies. Sample: Late adolescents (N = 272, 133 females; 17.23 ± 1.10 years) recruited from 15 classes in public high schools. Methods: Students were examined in their classroom during regular teaching activities and first performed a reading comprehension test. Then, they underwent a battery assessing literacy skills, academic self-concept, the dispositional tendency to mind wander, and aspects related to self-regulated learning. Results: Reading comprehension and literacy skills (decoding, orthographic awareness, spelling skills, and phonological abilities) were not associated with the tendency to mind wander. Instead, MW, test anxiety, and self-efficacy -- but not self-regulatory strategies -- were independent predictors of academic self-concept. Conclusions: This study highlights the importance of evaluating the effects of MW on academic self-concept, taking into account a complex pattern of motivational and emotional variables.
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- 2019
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20. A Multi-Informant Approach Testing an Expanded Home Numeracy Mode
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Paola Bonifacci, Diego Compiani, Viola Ravaldini, Benedetta Peri, Alexandra Affranti, and Valentina Tobia
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early numeracy ,contextual variables ,multi-informant approach ,Education - Abstract
The role of home numeracy activities in the development of numeracy skills is receiving growing interest, although some mixed results highlight the need to consider models that include different contextual variables. The present study was aimed at investigating, using a multi-method and multi-informant approach, how parents’ educational levels, parents’ numerical attitudes, home numeracy, and expectations toward their offspring’s numeracy attitudes concurrently predict children’s early numeracy abilities as measured with early numeracy tasks and through teachers’ evaluations. The sample includes 430 preschoolers, their parents, and 56 teachers. The children’s early numeracy competence was assessed using digit recognition and digit-quantity association tasks and via a proxy-report questionnaire administered to their teachers. The parents were then administered a questionnaire investigating their educational levels, home numeracy activities, math attitudes, and expectations toward their child’s numeracy ability. The results of the structural equation models revealed that both children’s performance in numeracy tasks and the teachers’ evaluation of their math skills were directly predicted by their parents’ educational levels. In contrast, the parents’ math attitudes were indirect predictors via the mediation of home numeracy. These results contribute to understanding the relationships between the investigated environmental variables and the children’s early math skills. Additionally, the implications for early family-based interventions are discussed.
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- 2023
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21. Eye-Movements in a Text Reading Task: A Comparison of Preterm Children, Children with Dyslexia and Typical Readers
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Paola Bonifacci, Valentina Tobia, Alessandra Sansavini, and Annalisa Guarini
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preterm birth ,dyslexia ,eye-movements ,reading ,primary schools ,Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry ,RC321-571 - Abstract
Preterm birth is associated with weaknesses in reading skills that are usually less severe than those of children with dyslexia. To understand the characteristics of reading processes in preterm children, we adopted a cross-population and multi-modal approach comparing eye movements in reading tasks among three groups: children with preterm birth, children with a diagnosis of dyslexia, and children with typical development. The study involved 78 participants (10.5 years). Eye movements (number and duration of fixations, amplitude and number of saccades, number of regressions) were recorded during the silent reading of two texts; cognitive and reading standardized tasks were also administered. Children with dyslexia had more fixations and more frequent and smaller saccades compared to the preterm group and children with typical development. They also showed more regressions compared to the control group. Preterm children showed shorter fixations compared to the other groups. Cognitive and reading standardized tasks confirmed severe delays in reading in children with dyslexia and some weaknesses in text reading speed and comprehension in preterm children. These results are discussed with reference to candidate mechanisms that underlie reading processes in preterm children and considering possible implications for research.
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- 2023
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22. Home Literacy and Numeracy Interact and Mediate the Relationship Between Socio-Economic Status and Early Linguistic and Numeracy Skills in Preschoolers
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Paola Bonifacci, Diego Compiani, Alexandra Affranti, and Benedetta Peri
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socio-economic status ,early literacy ,early numeracy ,home literacy ,home numeracy ,Psychology ,BF1-990 - Abstract
This longitudinal study aimed at evaluating the relationships between socio-economic status (SES) and early literacy and numeracy skills, testing home literacy and home numeracy as mediators. It also investigated the interaction of home literacy and numeracy on early literacy and numeracy skills. The study involved 310 preschool children attending the second and the third year. Parents completed questionnaires on SES and home literacy and numeracy. In the first session, children were administered language measures and non-symbolic numeracy skills and, in the second wave, tasks of early literacy and symbolic numeracy skills. Structural equation models (SEMs) showed that SES was predictive of early language and literacy skills and non-symbolic numeracy skills. In addition, home literacy and home numeracy significantly mediated the relationships between SES and children’s skills. Finally, home literacy and home numeracy showed a significant negative interaction on symbolic numeracy skills. Implications for research and educational settings are discussed.
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- 2021
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23. Verbal and Nonverbal Anticipatory Mechanisms in Bilinguals
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Desideri, Lorenzo and Bonifacci, Paola
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Empirical evidence collected so far has revealed that the bilingual advantage cannot be reduced to a single component of the executive functioning, and point to the need to understand the effects of bilingual experience on cognition as influencing a wider family of mental processes, including, but not limited to, cognitive control. The present study aims to explore a relatively underinvestigated domain of bilingual cognitive processes, namely anticipation, through a series of different paradigms tapping proactive and reactive mechanisms at different levels of cognitive complexity and linguistic components. The sample included 25 adult bilinguals (26.5 ± 7.8 years) and 25 monolinguals (26.4 ± 7 years) matched for age, gender, and non-verbal IQ. Participants were administered two experimental tasks: Attentional Network Task (ANT), and auditory picture-word identification task. Compared to monolinguals, bilinguals showed overall faster reaction times and reduced conflict effect on both the ANT and the picture-word identification task. In addition, associations between performances in the nonverbal and the verbal tasks support the role of the nonverbal monitoring component on verbal anticipation. Results are discussed in light of a dynamic interaction between proactive and reactive mechanisms of cognitive control.
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- 2018
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24. In Few Words: Linguistic Gap but Adequate Narrative Structure in Preschool Bilingual Children
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Bonifacci, Paola, Barbieri, Margherita, Tomassini, Marta, and Roch, Maja
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The aim of this study was to compare linguistic and narrative skills of monolingual and bilingual preschoolers and to estimate linguistic predictors of the macro-structural level of narratives. A battery of linguistic measures in Italian was administered to sixty-four Monolinguals and sixty-four Early Bilinguals; it included Vocabulary, Phonological Awareness, Morphosyntactic Comprehension, Phonological Memory, Letter Knowledge, and Story Sequencing tasks. The narratives produced in the Story Sequencing task were coded. Bilinguals underachieved, compared to monolinguals, in vocabulary, phonological awareness and morphosyntactic comprehension; they also differed in Type and Token indexes and in free morphology, but not in the level of macro-structural complexity. Macro-structural parameters were predicted by Mean Length of Utterances in monolinguals, but not in bilinguals. Bilingual children are able to structure stories in their L2 with monolingual-like cohesive complexity, although 'in few words', that is, with weak L2 linguistic skills.
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- 2018
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25. The Relationship of Reading Abilities With the Underlying Cognitive Skills of Math: A Dimensional Approach
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Luca Bernabini, Paola Bonifacci, and Peter F. de Jong
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math ,reading ,working memory ,approximate number system ,phonological awareness ,Psychology ,BF1-990 - Abstract
Math and reading are related, and math problems are often accompanied by problems in reading. In the present study, we used a dimensional approach and we aimed to assess the relationship of reading and math with the cognitive skills assumed to underlie the development of math. The sample included 97 children from 4th and 5th grades of a primary school. Children were administered measures of reading and math, non-verbal IQ, and various underlying cognitive abilities of math (counting, number sense, and number system knowledge). We also included measures of phonological awareness and working memory (WM). Two approaches were undertaken to elucidate the relations of the cognitive skills with math and reading. In the first approach, we examined the unique contributions of math and reading ability, as well as their interaction, to each cognitive ability. In the second approach, the cognitive abilities were taken to predict math and reading. Results from the first set of analyses showed specific effects of math on number sense and number system knowledge, whereas counting was affected by both math and reading. No math-by-reading interactions were observed. In contrast, for phonological awareness, an interaction of math and reading was found. Lower performing children on both math and reading performed disproportionately lower. Results with respect to the second approach confirmed the specific relation of counting, number sense, and number system knowledge to math and the relation of counting to reading but added that each math-related marker contributed independently to math. Following this approach, no unique effects of phonological awareness on math and reading were found. In all, the results show that math is specifically related to counting, number sense, and number system knowledge. The results also highlight what each approach can contribute to an understanding of the relations of the various cognitive correlates with reading and math.
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- 2021
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26. Predictors of Reading and Comprehension Abilities in Bilingual and Monolingual Children: A Longitudinal Study on a Transparent Language
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Bellocchi, Stéphanie, Tobia, Valentina, and Bonifacci, Paola
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Many studies have shown that learning to read in a second language (L2) is similar, in many ways, to learning to read in a first language (L1). Nevertheless, reading development also relies upon oral language proficiency and is greatly influenced by orthographic consistency. This longitudinal study aimed to analyze the role of linguistic predictors (phonological awareness, letter knowledge, pseudoword repetition, morphosyntactic comprehension, lexical knowledge and rapid naming) in reading outcomes (fluency, accuracy and comprehension) in a group of bilingual children (n = 30) reading Italian as an L2, compared to a group of monolingual children (n = 56). We ran a multi-group structural equation model. Our findings showed that rapid automatized naming was a significant predictor of reading speed in both groups. However, the study revealed different patterns of predictors for reading accuracy, predictors for monolinguals being LK, phonological awareness and lexical knowledge, while pseudoword repetition was a predictor for bilinguals. Morphosyntactic comprehension was the most significant predictor of comprehension skills in bilingual children. Implications for clinical and educational settings are discussed.
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- 2017
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27. Theoretical Models of Comprehension Skills Tested through a Comprehension Assessment Battery for Primary School Children
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Tobia, Valentina, Ciancaleoni, Matteo, and Bonifacci, Paola
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In this study, two alternative theoretical models were compared, in order to analyze which of them best explains primary school children's text comprehension skills. The first one was based on the distinction between two types of answers requested by the comprehension test: local or global. The second model involved texts' input modality: written or oral. For this purpose, a new instrument that assesses listening and reading comprehension skills (ALCE battery; Bonifacci et al., 2014) was administered to a large sample of 1,658 Italian primary school students. The two models were tested separately for the five grades (first to fifth grade). Furthermore, a third model, that included both the types of answers and the texts' input modality, was considered. Results of confirmatory factor analyses suggested that all models are adequate, but the second one (reading vs. listening) provided a better fit. The major role of the distinction between input modalities is discussed in relation to individual differences and developmental trajectories in text comprehension. Theoretical and clinical implications are discussed.
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- 2017
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28. The Simple View of Reading in Bilingual Language-Minority Children Acquiring a Highly Transparent Second Language
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Bonifacci, Paola and Tobia, Valentina
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The present study evaluated which components within the simple view of reading model better predicted reading comprehension in a sample of bilingual language-minority children exposed to Italian, a highly transparent language, as a second language. The sample included 260 typically developing bilingual children who were attending either the first 2 years (n = 95) or the last 3 years (n = 165) of primary school and who had Italian as an instructional language. Children were administered a comprehensive battery for the assessment of decoding skills, listening comprehension, and reading comprehension latent variables. Results showed that, in both groups, listening comprehension was the most powerful predictor of reading comprehension, followed, only for younger children, by reading accuracy. Reading speed was not a significant predictor. These results confirmed the primary role of listening comprehension in predicting reading comprehension in bilinguals and added important evidence regarding the role of reading accuracy as a predictor of reading comprehension.
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- 2017
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29. Literacy Acquisition Trajectories in Bilingual Language Minority Children and Monolingual Peers with Similar or Different SES: A Three-Year Longitudinal Study
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Paola Bonifacci, Ida Carmen Ferrara, Jessica Pedrinazzi, Francesco Terracina, and Paola Palladino
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bilingualism ,reading ,spelling ,reading comprehension ,listening comprehension ,language minority bilingual children ,Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry ,RC321-571 - Abstract
Bilingualism and socio-economic status (SES) differentially affect linguistic and cognitive development. However, less evidence has been collected regarding their impact on literacy trajectories. The present longitudinal study evaluated the literacy development of language minority bilingual children (LMBC) and monolingual peers with different SES. A group of LMBC with low-SES (n = 18) and monolingual peers with low (n = 18) or high (n = 14) SES were followed from 2nd to 5th grade through a set of tasks assessing decoding (words, nonwords, passage), reading, and listening comprehension, and spelling skills. The results showed that all groups achieved better performances over time in all measures, except listening comprehension. However, low-SES LMBC underperformed in spelling tasks compared to the monolingual groups. In reading comprehension, there was a time*group interaction that showed how low-SES LMBC reached similar performances of low-SES monolinguals in fifth grade, but both groups underperformed compared to the high SES monolingual group. The discussion is focused on the need for research and educational settings to consider the differential impact of bilingualism and SES. Bilingualism seems to be associated with a longer time in developing adequate spelling skills, whereas SES was the primary underpinning of the reading comprehension gap over time.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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30. Predictors of Children’s Early Numeracy: Environmental Variables, Intergenerational Pathways, and Children’s Cognitive, Linguistic, and Non-symbolic Number Skills
- Author
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Luca Bernabini, Valentina Tobia, Annalisa Guarini, and Paola Bonifacci
- Subjects
early numeracy ,broader phenotype ,approximate number system ,parents ,math skills ,Psychology ,BF1-990 - Abstract
Early numeracy skills in preschool years have been found to be related to a variety of different factors, including Approximate Number System (ANS) skills, children’s cognitive and linguistic skills, and environmental variables such as home numeracy activities. The present study aimed to analyze the differential role of environmental variables, intergenerational patterns, children’s cognitive and linguistic skills, and their ANS in supporting early math skills. The sample included 64 children in their last year of kindergarten and one parent of each child. Children were administered a battery of cognitive and linguistic tasks, and a non-symbolic comparison task as a measure of ANS. Parents were administered similar tasks assessing cognitive skills, math skills, and ANS skills (estimation and non-symbolic comparison), together with a questionnaire on home numeracy. Results showed that home numeracy predicted children’s early math skills better than a number of parent and child variables. Considering children’s skills, their ability in the non-symbolic magnitude comparison task was the strongest predictor of early math skills. Results reinforce the importance of the role of home numeracy activities and children’s ANS skills above that of parents’ math skills.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Reading under the Skin: Physiological Activation during Reading in Children with Dyslexia and Typical Readers
- Author
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Tobia, Valentina, Bonifacci, Paola, and Ottaviani, Cristina
- Abstract
The aim of this study was to investigate physiological activation during reading and control tasks in children with dyslexia and typical readers. Skin conductance response (SCR) recorded during four tasks involving reading aloud, reading silently, and describing illustrated stories aloud and silently was compared for children with dyslexia (n = 16) and a control group of typical readers (n = 16). Children's school wellness was measured through self- and parent-proxy reports. Significantly lower SCR was found for dyslexic children in the reading-aloud task, compared to the control group, whereas all participants showed similar physiological reactions to the other experimental conditions. SCR registered during reading tasks correlated with "Child's emotional difficulties," as reported by parents. Possible interpretations of the lower activation during reading aloud in dyslexic children are discussed.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Concurrent and Longitudinal Predictors of Calculation Skills in Preschoolers
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Tobia, Valentina, Bonifacci, Paola, and Marzocchi, Gian Marco
- Abstract
Early calculation abilities in preschoolers are predictive of mathematics achievement in subsequent grades (e.g., Jordan et al. 2009). Two studies were conducted to evaluate concurrent and longitudinal predictors of early calculation skills. In the first study, 102 preschoolers (57.8% female; mean age?=?60.57?±?8.66 months) were given vocabulary, language comprehension, and verbal working memory tasks and a test battery that evaluated components of early number competence (quantity comparison, counting, number line, size seriation, semantic knowledge of digits, visual-spatial memory). The children were also asked to complete early calculation tasks, including addition and subtraction calculations. The results of this task constituted the dependent variable. The results showed that vocabulary, size seriation, and visual-spatial memory were significant concurrent predictors of early calculation competence. In the second study, 43 children completed the early number competence battery at time 1 (53.5% female; mean age?=?59.30?±?3.46 months) and the linguistic and early calculation tasks at time 2, about 10 months later (mean age?=?69.43?±?3.31 months). The analysis of the longitudinal predictors of early calculation showed significant effects for counting and size seriation. The implications for preschool assessment and intervention are discussed.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
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33. Specific Learning Disorders: A Look Inside Children's and Parents' Psychological Well-Being and Relationships
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Bonifacci, Paola, Storti, Michele, Tobia, Valentina, and Suardi, Alessandro
- Abstract
Despite their ascertained neurobiological origin, specific learning disorders (SLD) often have been found to be associated with some emotional disturbances in children, and there is growing interest in the environmental and contextual variables that may modulate children's developmental trajectories. The present study was aimed at evaluating the psychological profile of parents and children and the relationships between their measures. Parents of children with SLD (17 couples, 34 participants) and parents of children with typical development (17 couples, 34 participants) were administered questionnaires assessing parenting styles, reading history, parenting stress, psychopathological indexes, and evaluations of children's anxiety and depression. Children (N = 34, 10.7 ± 1.2 years) were assessed with self-evaluation questionnaires on anxiety, depression, and self-esteem and with a scale assessing their perception of parents' qualities. Results showed that parents of children with SLD have higher parental distress, poorer reading history, and different parenting styles compared to parents of children with TD; there were no differences in psychopathological indexes. The SLD group also rated their children as more anxious and depressed. Children with SLD had lower scholastic and interpersonal self-esteem, but they report ratings of parents' qualities similar to those of TD children. Relationships between parents' and children's measures were further explored. Implications for research and practice are discussed.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
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34. Using a Humanoid Robot as a Complement to Interventions for Children with Autism Spectrum Disorder: a Pilot Study
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Desideri, Lorenzo, Negrini, Marco, Malavasi, Massimiliano, Tanzini, Daniela, Rouame, Aziz, Cutrone, Maria Cristina, Bonifacci, Paola, and Hoogerwerf, Evert-Jan
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
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35. The Simple View of Reading in a Transparent Orthography: The Stronger Role of Oral Comprehension
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Tobia, Valentina and Bonifacci, Paola
- Abstract
Comprehension is the ultimate goal of reading, but it is a very complex task consisting of multiple component skills. A number of studies have tested the simple view of reading (SVR; Gough & Tunmer, 1986) in opaque languages, but few investigations of the SVR components have been conducted on transparent languages. In the present study, we tested the SVR model in a sample of 1895 Italian children attending primary school, from first to fifth grade. An assessment battery was used, which included five different tasks: word and non-word reading, passage reading, reading comprehension, and oral comprehension. Hybrid models combining confirmatory factor analysis with path analysis were run separately for each grade. Results indicated that oral comprehension was always the best predictor of reading comprehension, whereas reading accuracy played a significant but minor role. Implications for research and practice are discussed.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
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36. Creativity Style and Achievements: An Investigation on the Role of Emotional Competence, Individual Differences, and Psychometric Intelligence
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Raffaella Nori, Stefania Signore, and Paola Bonifacci
- Subjects
creativity ,age factors ,intelligence ,individual difference ,emotional competence ,Psychology ,BF1-990 - Abstract
Psychometric and emotional intelligence are considered as two separate theoretical constructs, although each one has been found to correlate to a certain degree with measures of creativity. The aim of the present study was to analyze whether individual differences such as age and gender, together with psychometric intelligence and emotional competence (EC) predicted creativity. We selected a sample of 376 participants aged 12–88 (mean age = 30.28 years, SD = 19.09 years; 224 females) to evaluate relationships between these constructs across lifespan. Participants were administered the Kaufman Brief Intelligence Test-2, the Short Profile of EC, the Creativity Style Questionnaire Revised (CSQ-R) and the Creative Achievement Questionnaire (CAQ). T-test on gender differences evidenced that males had higher creativity achievements compared to females. A path analysis was applied to examine the relationships between the CAQ and CSQ-R scores as dependent variables and the potential predictors assessed. Results showed that CSQ-R was significantly predicted by interpersonal emotional competence and marginally by educational level (p = 0.058) and intrapersonal emotional competence (p = 0.051). On the other hand, the CAQ score was significantly predicted by gender, age, and composite IQ. Discussion is focused on possible theoretical implications.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
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37. Speed of Processing, Anticipation, Inhibition and Working Memory in Bilinguals
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Bonifacci, Paola, Giombini, Lucia, and Bellocchi, Stephanie
- Abstract
Literature on the so-called bilingual advantage is directed towards the investigation of whether the mastering of two languages fosters cognitive skills in the non-verbal domain. The present study aimed to evaluate whether the bilingual advantage in non-verbal skills could be best defined as domain-general or domain-specific, and, in the latter case, at identifying the basic cognitive skills involved. Bilingual and monolingual participants were divided into two different age groups (children, youths) and were tested on a battery of elementary cognitive tasks which included a choice reaction time task, a go/no-go task, two working memory tasks (numbers and symbols) and an anticipation task. Bilingual and monolingual children did not differ from each other except for the anticipation task, where bilinguals were found to be faster and more accurate than monolinguals. These findings suggest that anticipation, which has received little attention to date, is an important cognitive domain which needs to be evaluated to a greater extent both in bilingual and monolingual participants.
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
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38. Reading and Writing: What Is the Relationship with Anxiety and Depression?
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Bonifacci, Paola, Candria, Lucia, and Contento, Silvana
- Abstract
Learning can be considered a function of synthesis in which both cognitive functioning and the domain of affectivity convey. The aim of the present study was to investigate how specific literacy skills, i.e., reading and writing, relate to two main dimensions of negative affectivity, i.e., anxiety and depression. Study 1 was conducted on third grade children (72), while Study 2 focused on first grade children (43). Two groups of participants selected because they had been deemed "at risk" for the development of anxiety or depression and a control group were compared in reading and writing tasks, which included both word and non-word lists. The assessment included also the evaluation of Verbal, Nonverbal and Composite IQs. Results indicated that children "at risk" for depression made more spelling errors in dictation of words in comparison to the control group. No differences emerged in reading tasks or with reference to the group of children "at risk" for anxiety.
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
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39. Speed of Processing and Reading Disability: A Cross-Linguistic Investigation of Dyslexia and Borderline Intellectual Functioning
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Bonifacci, Paola and Snowling, Margaret J.
- Abstract
English and Italian children with dyslexia were compared with children with reading difficulties associated with low-IQ on tests of simple and choice RT, and in number and symbol scanning tasks. On all four speed-of-processing tasks, children with low-IQ responded more slowly than children with dyslexia and age-controls. In the choice RT task, the performance of children with low-IQ was also less accurate than that of children of normal IQ, consistent with theories linking processing speed limitations with low-IQ. These findings support the hypothesis that dyslexia is a specific cognitive deficit that can arise in the context of normal IQ and normal speed of processing. The same cognitive phenotype was observed in readers of a deep (English) and a shallow (Italian) orthography.
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Symbolic versus non-symbolic training for improving early numeracy in low achieving preschoolers: Short-term effects and follow-up in primary school
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Tobia, V, Bonifacci, P, Marzocchi, GM, Tobia, V, Bonifacci, P, and Marzocchi, G
- Subjects
Math prerequisite ,Early intervention ,Low-achiever ,Numerical cognition - Abstract
Background: Children's understanding of symbolic (e.g., Arabic digits) and non-symbolic (e.g., sets of dots) magnitudes plays a key role in their mathematics achievement, but only a few studies directly compared the effects of symbolic and non-symbolic interventions on mathematical abilities. Aims: This longitudinal study compared the impact of symbolic and non-symbolic trainings in a group of preschoolers at risk of developing difficulties in mathematics (RM), analyzing their post-intervention performance both in early math skills (last preschool year) and in mathematics achievement in 1st grade. Methods: Eighty-nine RM children and 66 typically developing controls were selected from among 604 preschoolers. RM children were assigned to three intervention conditions: no intervention, symbolic or non-symbolic intervention. Results: Results showed specific effects on tasks related to the training (e.g., effects of symbolic training on symbolic tasks) and some effects of generalization (e.g., effects of symbolic training on non-symbolic tasks). In 1st grade, children attending the symbolic intervention showed a mathematics achievement profile similar to that of typically developing peers. Conclusions: These results suggest the importance of training the symbolic processing of numbers at preschool age, allowing at risk children to catch up with their peers before entering formal schooling.
- Published
- 2021
41. Teachers, not parents, are able to predict time processing skills in preschoolers
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Tobia, V, Bonifacci, P, Bernabini, L, Marzocchi, G, Tobia V., Bonifacci P., Bernabini L., Marzocchi G. M., Tobia, V, Bonifacci, P, Bernabini, L, Marzocchi, G, Tobia V., Bonifacci P., Bernabini L., and Marzocchi G. M.
- Abstract
Time processing difficulties are associated with developmental disorders. Questionnaires for assessing children's sense of time are available from primary school, but we lack valid proxy-report tools for younger children, who are not able to complete self-reports. This study aimed to assess the criterion validity of a questionnaire investigating preschoolers’ sense of time from the points of view of their parents and teachers. One hundred seventy preschoolers were included in the sample. Their parents and teachers completed the Sense of Time Questionnaire, and the children were administered time reproduction and time discrimination tasks, both concurrently and 7 months later. The assessment of preschoolers’ sense of time reported by teachers, but not by parents, predicted the children's time processing skills both concurrently and longitudinally. The teacher version of the Sense of Time Questionnaire constitutes a valid instrument for assessing and predicting preschoolers’ time processing skills and can be used for clinical and research purposes. Statement of contribution: What is already known on this subject? Time processing difficulties are associated with developmental disorders such as ADHD and dyscalculia. Early assessment of time processing skills is important for clinical (e.g., screening) and research purposes. We do not have valid questionnaires for assessing sense of time in young children. What the present study adds? The sense of time ability reported by teachers predicts preschoolers’ time processing skills. The sense of time ability reported by parents does not predicts preschoolers’ time processing skills. The Sense of Time Questionnaire is a valid instrument for investigating time processing skills of 4–6 aged children.
- Published
- 2019
42. The acquisition of spelling skills in bilingual children with Italian L2
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Affranti A., Tobia V., Bonifacci P., Affranti A., Tobia V., and Bonifacci P.
- Subjects
Orthographic skill ,Linguistic history ,Bilingualism ,Writing skills ,Reading skill - Abstract
The aim of this study was to deepen the acquisition of orthographic skills and their relationship with environmental and linguistic variables in bilingual and monolingual children. The study involved 86 monolinguals and 43 bilinguals (aged 9-11 years), who were administered with reading and writing tests for words and non-words, passage dictation, narrative written production, morphosyntactic comprehension and repetition of non-words; linguistic history and socio- economic status have also been investigated. Writing seems to require longer acquisition times than reading for bilinguals, however there are some advantages in narrative production tasks. Age of exposure, verbal knowledge, morphosyntactic comprehension and reading skills seem to play an important role in predicting writing skills in the bilingual group.
- Published
- 2020
43. Maths and magnitude comparison in very preterm children, children with developmental dyscalculia and typically developing children
- Author
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Guarini A., Tobia V., Bonifacci P., Sansavini A., Guarini, A., Tobia, V., Bonifacci, P., and Sansavini, A.
- Published
- 2019
44. Emotional attention: effects of emotion and gaze direction on overt orienting of visual attention
- Author
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Bonifacci, Paola, Ricciardelli, Paola, Lugli, Luisa, and Pellicano, Antonello
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Predictors of reading ability in bilingual children learning to read in Italian-L2
- Author
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Bellocchi, S, TOBIA, VALENTINA ANTONIA, Bonifacci, P., Bellocchi, S, Tobia, VALENTINA ANTONIA, Bonifacci, P., Tobia, V, and Bonifacci, P
- Subjects
M-PSI/04 - PSICOLOGIA DELLO SVILUPPO E PSICOLOGIA DELL'EDUCAZIONE ,reading ,school-aged children ,bilingual ,Italian orthography - Published
- 2017
46. SNUP
- Author
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Tobia, V, Bonifacci, P, Marzocchi, GM, Tobia, V, Bonifacci, P, and Marzocchi, Gm
- Subjects
mathematical ability ,assessment ,preschooler ,learning prerequisite - Published
- 2018
47. Predictors of reading and comprehension abilities in bilingual and monolingual children: a longitudinal study on a transparent language
- Author
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Bellocchi, S, Tobia, V, Bonifacci, P, Bonifacci, P., TOBIA, VALENTINA ANTONIA, Bellocchi, S, Tobia, V, Bonifacci, P, Bonifacci, P., and TOBIA, VALENTINA ANTONIA
- Abstract
Many studies have shown that learning to read in a second language (L2) is similar, in many ways, to learning to read in a first language (L1). Nevertheless, reading development also relies upon oral language proficiency and is greatly influenced by orthographic consistency. This longitudinal study aimed to analyze the role of linguistic predictors (phonological awareness, letter knowledge, pseudoword repetition, morphosyntactic comprehension, lexical knowledge and rapid naming) in reading outcomes (fluency, accuracy and comprehension) in a group of bilingual children (n = 30) reading Italian as an L2, compared to a group of monolingual children (n = 56). We ran a multi-group structural equation model. Our findings showed that rapid automatized naming was a significant predictor of reading speed in both groups. However, the study revealed different patterns of predictors for reading accuracy, predictors for monolinguals being LK, phonological awareness and lexical knowledge, while pseudoword repetition was a predictor for bilinguals. Morphosyntactic comprehension was the most significant predictor of comprehension skills in bilingual children. Implications for clinical and educational settings are discussed
- Published
- 2017
48. Theoretical models of comprehension skills tested through a comprehension assessment battery for primary school children
- Author
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Tobia, V, Ciancaleoni, M, Bonifacci, P, TOBIA, VALENTINA ANTONIA, Bonifacci, P., Tobia, V, Ciancaleoni, M, Bonifacci, P, TOBIA, VALENTINA ANTONIA, and Bonifacci, P.
- Abstract
In this study, two alternative theoretical models were compared, in order to analyze which of them best explains primary school children's text comprehension skills. The first one was based on the distinction between two types of answers requested by the comprehension test: local or global. The second model involved texts' input modality: written or oral. For this purpose, a new instrument that assesses listening and reading comprehension skills (ALCE battery; Bonifacci et al., 2014) was administered to a large sample of 1,658 Italian primary school students. The two models were tested separately for the five grades (first to fifth grade). Furthermore, a third model, that included both the types of answers and the texts' input modality, was considered. Results of confirmatory factor analyses suggested that all models are adequate, but the second one (reading vs. listening) provided a better fit. The major role of the distinction between input modalities is discussed in relation to individual differences and developmental trajectories in text comprehension. Theoretical and clinical implications are discussed
- Published
- 2017
49. Exploring the Use of a Humanoid Robot to Engage Children with Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD)
- Author
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Desideri L., Negrini M., Cutrone M. C., Rouame A., Malavasi M., Hoogerwerf E. -J., Bonifacci P., Di Sarro R., Desideri L., Negrini M., Cutrone M.C., Rouame A., Malavasi M., Hoogerwerf E.-J., Bonifacci P., and Di Sarro R.
- Subjects
robotics ,human-robot interaction ,Autism Spectrum Disorder ,mental disorders ,behavioral disciplines and activities ,rehabilitation - Abstract
We present a study aimed at exploring whether a humanoid robot may improve the effectiveness of educational interventions targeting children with autism spectrum disorders (ASD). Preliminary results with three preschool children with ASD indicate that interacting with a humanoid robot may facilitate engagement and goal achievement in educational activities.
- Published
- 2017
50. Prerequisiti dell’abilità matematica: Un confronto tra due interventi con bambini a rischio di sviluppare difficoltà di calcolo
- Author
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TOBIA, VALENTINA ANTONIA, Bernabini, L, Bonifacci, P, MARZOCCHI, GIAN MARCO, Tobia, V, Bernabini, L, Bonifacci, P, Marzocchi, G, Valentina Tobia, Luca Bernabini, Paola Bonifacci, Gian Marco Marzocchi, Tobia, VALENTINA ANTONIA, and Marzocchi, GIAN MARCO
- Subjects
early intervention ,M-PSI/04 - PSICOLOGIA DELLO SVILUPPO E PSICOLOGIA DELL'EDUCAZIONE ,calcolo ,matematica ,Learning prerequisite ,Mathematic ,Prerequisiti - Abstract
Studi recenti suggeriscono che la conoscenza dei numeri arabici, piuttosto che le competenze non- simboliche della cognizione numerica, è una variabile chiave nel predire lo sviluppo dell’abilità matematica (Göbel et al., 2014). Questo studio indaga gli effetti di due tipologie di intervento per bambini in età prescolare a rischio di sviluppare difficoltà in matematica: uno che potenzia conoscenza e uso del codice arabico e l’altro che lavora sugli aspetti quantitativi non-simbolici. A seguito di uno screening che ha coinvolto 600 bambini di 4 anni, sono stati selezionati 72 bambini a rischio e 121 controlli con buone competenze di pre-matematica. I bambini a rischio hanno svolto un intervento di tipo simbolico, non-simbolico, oppure nessun intervento. Verranno presentati i risultati preliminari degli effetti dei due tipi di intervento su competenze simboliche (es.,lettura cifre) e non- simboliche (es., confronto quantità) valutate alla fine della scuola dell’infanzia. Si discuterà inoltre dei risultati attesi alla scuola primaria.
- Published
- 2017
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