![]() | Eliane SegersBehavioural Science Institute, Radboud University, Netherlands. | Behavioural Science Institute, Radboud University, Nijmegen, Netherlands | Montessorilaan 3, P.P. Box 9104, ... |
KOL Resume for Eliane Segers
Year | |
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2022 | Behavioural Science Institute, Radboud University, Netherlands. |
2021 | Behavioural Science Institute, Radboud University, Nijmegen, Netherlands |
2020 | Department of Instructional Technology, University of Twente, the Netherlands |
2019 | Instructional Science, Twente University, Enschede, Netherlands Behavioural Science Institute, Radboud University |
2018 | Behavioural Science Institute, Radboud University, Nijmegen, View further author information Department of Instructional Technology, University of Twente, The Netherlands |
2017 | Behavioural Science Institute, Radboud University, P.O. Box 9104, 6500 HE Nijmegen, The Netherlands Eliane Segers is professor in reading and digital media with a special interest in how children can optimally learn in digital environments. |
2016 | Radboud University, Behavioural Science Institute, 6500 HC Nijmegen, The Netherlands Instructional Technology, University of Twente |
2015 | Behavioural Science Institute, Radboud University Nijmegen, The Netherlands |
2014 | Behavioural Science Institute, Radboud University Nijmegen, Montessorilaan 3, P.O. Box 9104, 6500 HE, Nijmegen, The Netherlands |
2013 | Behavioural Science Institute, Radboud University Nijmegen, Montessorilaan 3, P.O. Box 9104, 6500 HE Nijmegen, The Netherlands |
2012 | Behavioural Science Institute, Radboud University, PO box 9104, 6500 HE, Nijmegen, The Netherlands |
2011 | Department of Special Education, Behavioural Science Institute, Radboud University Nijmegen, Nijmegen, The Netherlands |
2010 | Radboud University Nijmegen, Behavioural Science Institute |
2009 | Behavioural Science Institute, Radboud University Nijmegen, Spinoza Building, 5th floor, P.O. Box 9104, 6500 HE Nijmegen, The Netherlands |
2008 | Behavioural Science Institute, Radboud University Nijmegen, Spinoza Building, 5th floor, P.O. Box 9104, 6500 HE Nijmegen, The Netherlands. |
2005 | Department of Special Education, Radboud University Nijmegen, The Netherlands |
2004 | Department of Special Education, University of Nijmegen, Spinoza Building, 5th floor, P. O. Box 9104, 6500 HE Nijmegen, The Netherlands |
2003 | Department of Special Education, University of Nijmegen |
2002 | School of Education, University of Nijmegen, Spinoza Building, 5th floor, PO Box 9104, 6500 HE Nijmegen, The Netherlands |
1999 | Nijmegen Institute for Cognition and Information, P.O. Box 9104, 6500 HE Nijmegen, The Netherlands; e-mail: http://hwr.nici.kun.nl, NL |
Eliane Segers: Influence Statistics
Concept | World rank |
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computer vocabulary learning | #1 |
spacing arial | #1 |
font dyslexie | #1 |
directly intervention | #1 |
vocabulary computer | #1 |
computer vocabulary | #1 |
301 fourth graders | #1 |
experimental n9 | #1 |
kindergarten children special | #1 |
retention transfer knowledge | #1 |
geometry fractions | #1 |
analog literacy | #1 |
domainspecific knowledge instructions | #1 |
inquirybased lesson series | #1 |
hearing language problems | #1 |
30 children dyslexia | #1 |
children representational pictures | #1 |
font matched | #1 |
spoken visual channel | #1 |
learning gain webquests | #1 |
computer vocabulary training | #1 |
gain webquest | #1 |
special education webquest | #1 |
teacher computer | #1 |
adults laboratory setting | #1 |
webquest valuable tool | #1 |
39 lowprogress readers | #1 |
teacher verbal support | #1 |
children modality learning | #1 |
skills directly | #1 |
2008 christian boer | #1 |
web‐based environment | #1 |
fifthgrade advanced mathematics | #1 |
webquests special | #1 |
webquest defined | #1 |
dyslexia font | #1 |
representational pictures text | #1 |
knowledge test facts | #1 |
combined strengthened | #1 |
computer experimental | #1 |
commonly sans | #1 |
illdefined assignments | #1 |
reversed modality | #1 |
special font dyslexie | #1 |
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Prominent publications by Eliane Segers
How phonological awareness mediates the relation between working memory and word reading efficiency in children with dyslexia
[ PUBLICATION ]
This study examined the relation between working memory, phonological awareness, and word reading efficiency in fourth-grade children with dyslexia. To test whether the relation between phonological awareness and word reading efficiency differed for children with dyslexia versus typically developing children, we assessed phonological awareness and word reading efficiency in 50 children with dyslexia (aged 9;10, 35 boys) and 613 typically developing children (aged 9;5, 279 boys). ...
Known for Phonological Awareness | Dyslexia Memory | Word Reading | Fourthgrade Children | Typically Developing |
Phonological specificity relates to phonological awareness and reading ability in English–French bilingual children
[ PUBLICATION ]
The 1-year longitudinal study presented here examined the extent to which the ability to build phonologically specific lexical entries as a result of increasing vocabulary size predicts word reading via its impact on phonological awareness within and across languages in 62 emerging English (L1) and French (L2) Grade 1 children (M = 75.69 months, SD = 3.18) enrolled in an early French immersion program in Canada. Lexical specificity was assessed with a computerized word learning game in ...
Known for Phonological Awareness | Lexical Specificity | Word Reading | English French | Grade 1 |
BACKGROUND: For pre-school children, the home literacy environment (HLE) plays an important role in the development of language and literacy skills. As there is little known about the HLE of children with intellectual disabilities (ID), the aim of the present study was to investigate the HLE of children with ID in comparison with children without disabilities.
METHOD: Parent questionnaires concerning aspects of the HLE were used to investigate differences between 48 children with ID, 107 ...
Known for Literacy Environment | Children Intellectual Disabilities | Productive Syntax | Parent Child | Intellectual Disability |
We examined the responsiveness to a 12-week phonics intervention in 54 s-grade Dutch children with dyslexia, and compared their reading and spelling gains to a control group of 61 typical readers. The intervention aimed to train grapheme-phoneme correspondences (GPCs), and word reading and spelling by using phonics instruction. We examined the accuracy and efficiency of grapheme-phoneme correspondences, decoding words and pseudowords, as well as the accuracy of spelling words before and ...
Known for Spelling Intervention | Children Dyslexia | Precursor Measures | Word Reading | Accuracy Efficiency |
Allophonic mode of speech perception in Dutch children at risk for dyslexia: A longitudinal study
[ PUBLICATION ]
There is ample evidence that individuals with dyslexia have a phonological deficit. A growing body of research also suggests that individuals with dyslexia have problems with categorical perception, as evidenced by weaker discrimination of between-category differences and better discrimination of within-category differences compared to average readers. Whether the categorical perception problems of individuals with dyslexia are a result of their reading problems or a cause has yet to be ...
Known for Speech Perception | Risk Dyslexia | Reading Problems | Phonological Deficit | Weaker Discrimination |
Cognitive and linguistic predictors of reading comprehension in children with intellectual disabilities
[ PUBLICATION ]
A considerable number of children with intellectual disabilities (ID) are able to acquire basic word reading skills. However, not much is known about their achievements in more advanced reading comprehension skills. In the present study, a group of 49 children with ID and a control group of 21 typically developing children with word decoding skills in the normal ranges of first grade were compared in lower level (explicit meaning) and higher level (implicit meaning) reading comprehension ...
Known for Reading Comprehension | Intellectual Disabilities | Nonverbal Reasoning | Linguistic Skills | Word Decoding |
Learning to read is a complex process that develops normally in the majority of children and requires the mapping of graphemes to their corresponding phonemes. Problems with the mapping process nevertheless occur in about 5% of the population and are typically attributed to poor phonological representations, which are--in turn--attributed to underlying speech processing difficulties. We examined auditory discrimination of speech sounds in 6-year-old beginning readers with a familial risk ...
Known for Risk Dyslexia | Allophonic Perception | Neural Evidence | Mmn Children | Auditory Discrimination |
Predictors of early literacy skills in children with intellectual disabilities: A clinical perspective
[ PUBLICATION ]
The present study investigated the linguistic and cognitive predictors of early literacy in 17 children with intellectual disabilities (ID) (mean age: 7; 6 years) compared to 24 children with normal language acquisition (NLA) (mean age: 6; 0 years), who were all in the so-called partial alphabetic phase of reading (Ehri, 2005). In each group, children's performances in early literacy skills (phonological awareness, letter knowledge, and word decoding) were assessed, as well as their ...
Known for Early Literacy Skills | Children Nla | Intellectual Disabilities | Letter Knowledge | Phonological Awareness |
This study aims to investigate secondary school students' reading comprehension and navigation of networked hypertexts with and without a graphic overview compared to linear digital texts. Additionally, it was studied whether prior knowledge, vocabulary, verbal, and visual working memory moderated the relation between text design and comprehension. Therefore, 80 first‐year secondary school students read both a linear text and a networked hypertext with and without a graphical overview. ...
Known for Networked Hypertexts | Reading Comprehension | Graphic Overview | Lower Vocabulary | Digital Text |
Classroom ratings of likeability and popularity are related to the Big Five and the general factor of personality
[ PUBLICATION ]
The present study examined whether: (i) self-rated personality (Big Five) is related to peer-ratings of likeability and popularity in classmates and (ii) a General Factor of Personality (GFP), reflecting the shared variance of the Big Five, is related to social status. In a sociometric approach, adolescent classmates (N=512) rated each other on likeability and popularity. The Big Five dimensions Extraversion and Emotional Stability were associated with likeability as well as popularity ...
Known for Likeability Popularity | General Factor | Personality Gfp | Social Status | Correlation Regression |
OBJECTIVE: A growing body of evidence suggests that individuals with dyslexia perceive speech using allophonic rather than phonemic units and are thus sensitive to phonetic variations that are actually irrelevant in the ambient language. This study investigated speech perception difficulties in adults with dyslexia using behavioural and neural measurements with stimuli along a place-of-articulation continuum with well-defined allophonic boundaries. Adults without dyslexia served as ...
Known for Speech Perception | Adults Dyslexia | Evoked Potentials | Phonemic Units | Sensitivity Allophonic |
Lexical quality and executive control predict children’s first and second language reading comprehension
[ PUBLICATION ]
This study compared how lexical quality (vocabulary and decoding) and executive control (working memory and inhibition) predict reading comprehension directly as well as indirectly, via syntactic integration, in monolingual and bilingual fourth grade children. The participants were 76 monolingual and 102 bilingual children (mean age 10 years, SD = 5 months) learning to read Dutch in the Netherlands. Bilingual children showed lower Dutch vocabulary, syntactic integration and reading ...
Known for Reading Comprehension | Executive Control | Bilingual Children | Language Vocabulary | Monolingual Peers |
The present study aimed to examine the modality and redundancy effects in multimedia learning in children with dyslexia in order to find out whether their learning benefits from written and/or spoken text with pictures. We compared study time and knowledge gain in 26 11-year-old children with dyslexia and 38 typically reading peers in a within-subjects design. All children were presented with a series of user-paced multimedia lessons in 3 conditions: pictorial information presented with ...
Known for Multimedia Learning | Redundancy Effects | Children Dyslexia | Study Time | Written Text |
How cognitive factors affect language development in children with intellectual disabilities
[ PUBLICATION ]
The present study investigated the language development of 50 children with intellectual disabilities (ID) and 42 typically developing children from age 4 to 5 years, and was designed to shed more light on the respective roles of phonological working memory (WM) and nonverbal intelligence in vocabulary and syntax development. Results showed that nonverbal intelligence predicted phonological WM, vocabulary and syntax of children with ID at age 4 and 5, and that it only predicted these ...
Known for Language Development | Intellectual Disabilities | Nonverbal Intelligence | Vocabulary Age | Phonological Memory |
Response to Intervention as a Predictor of Long‐Term Reading Outcomes in Children with Dyslexia
[ PUBLICATION ]
The goal of this study was to investigate how growth during a phonics-based intervention, as well as reading levels at baseline testing, predicted long-term reading outcomes of children with dyslexia. Eighty Dutch children with dyslexia who had completed a 50-week phonics-based intervention in grade 4 were tested in grade 5 on both word and pseudoword (following regular Dutch orthographic patterns) reading efficiency and compared to 93 typical readers. In grade 5 the children with ...
Known for Children Dyslexia | Word Reading | Grade 5 | Male Phonetics | Typical Readers |
Key People For Reading Comprehension
Eliane Segers:Expert Impact
Concepts for whichEliane Segershas direct influence:Reading comprehension, Phonological awareness, Intellectual disabilities, Children dyslexia, Networked hypertexts, Scientific reasoning, Early literacy, Executive control.
Eliane Segers:KOL impact
Concepts related to the work of other authors for whichfor which Eliane Segers has influence:Phonological awareness, General factor, Reading comprehension, Young children, Retrieval practice, Academic achievement, Executive functions.
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