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SD-squared revisited: Reply to Coltheart, Tree, and Saunders (2010).
Author(s) -
Anna M. Woollams,
Matthew A. Lambon Ralph,
David C. Plaut,
Karalyn Patterson
Publication year - 2010
Publication title -
psychological review
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 4.688
H-Index - 211
eISSN - 1939-1471
pISSN - 0033-295X
DOI - 10.1037/a0017641
Subject(s) - connectionism , phonology , pronunciation , psychology , dyslexia , reading (process) , semantic dementia , cognitive psychology , natural language processing , cognition , computer science , linguistics , dementia , neuroscience , medicine , philosophy , disease , pathology , frontotemporal dementia
The connectionist triangle model of reading aloud proposes that semantic activation of phonology is particularly important for correct pronunciation of low-frequency exception words. Our consideration of this issue (Woollams, Lambon Ralph, Plaut, & Patterson, 2007) reported computational simulations demonstrating that reduction and disruption of this semantic activation resulted in the marked deficit in low-frequency exception word reading that is characteristic of surface dyslexia. We then presented 100 observations of reading aloud from 51 patients with semantic dementia (SD) demonstrating a universal decline into surface dyslexia, a phenomenon we termed "SD-squared." Coltheart, Tree, and Saunders (2010) have more recently provided a simulation of the SD-squared data within the dual route cascaded (DRC) model, achieved by varying the amount of damage to components of the lexical and nonlexical pathways. Although they suggested that these simulations provide a closer fit to the SD patients' reading data than our own, we demonstrate here that this is not the case. Moreover, we argue that the connectionist triangle model account has substantially greater explanatory and predictive power than the DRC account.

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