Writing An D Spelling: Chapter Six
Writing An D Spelling: Chapter Six
Writing an d Spelling
PLANNING TO WRITE
Compare the transcript of a casual conversation with a passage of text from
a book and you will notice many differences. Typical speech has a simple
grammatical structure and may lack clear sentence boundaries, is
59
60 6. WRITING AND SPELLING
and directions of arguments which I had not thought of. Another writer
comments in similar vein that, Writing for me is an experience of knowing
what to say. I can make endless schemes of how the piece should run but
it never comes out according to plan. Until I have written a paragraph, I
do not even know whether what I am saying is true. Once it is down in
black and white I frequently see that it is not and then I have to ask myself
why it is not (Wason, 1980, p. 133).
The model of writing proposed by Hayes and Flower (1980; 1986) contains
the separate elements pre-write, write and rewrite, but they are thought of as
being in continuous interaction rather than being a linear sequence of stages.
Within the space of a few seconds, a writer may be planning what to write
next, writing the current sentence and then evaluating it to see if it does the
job required of it. In Hayes and Flowers model, the initial planning of writing
is influenced by the task environment (such things as the topic to be written
about and the intended audience) andby the writerslong-termmemory, which
includes his or her knowledge of the topic, knowledge of the audience, and
stored formulae or general plans for essay writing. Given this input, one must
set about planning the content ofthe essay, bearingin mind certain constraints
and goals such as the requirements to make the text comprehensible,
memorable, persuasive or entertaining (see Collins & Gentner, 1980). Clearly
these constraints will influence different writing assignments to different
degrees. A thriller writer must be entertaining and comprehensible but need
not be especially memorable, while an office memo need only aim at
comprehensibility. In planning one must then organise the list oftopics orideas
one wishes to mention into a logical order.
According to Hayes and Flower, planning involves non-linguistic,
conceptual representations which could, for example, include extensive use
of visual imagery. The necessity for ideas and concepts to be originally
represented in an abstract language of thought can be appreciated if one
reflects that many people can express the same ideas equally well in two
or three different spoken languages, or that a series of instructions can
often be conveyed as well, if not better, in a flow chart or series of pictures
as in a series of sentences. Each idea or topic must then be broken down
into a sequence of propositions which will be expressed in individual
sentences or clauses. One then starts to write. Some writers formulate a
very detailed plan before they start to write; others have only the sketchiest
of outlines in their heads and let the topics organise themselves as they
write. Some writers continuously monitor and edit their prose for spelling,
grammaticality, accuracy of meaning and comprehensibility; others prefer
to get it all down with minimal editing, then set about improving the
product when they prepare a subsequent draft.
While practice at writing may improve and hone the skills we have just
discussed, there is nothing to suggest that they are in any way unique to
62 6. WRITING AND SPELLING
from Visual
Input Lexicon
SEMANTIC
SYSTEM
from Visual
Input Lexicon
SPEECH GRAPHEMIC
OUTPUT OUTPUT
LEXICON LEXICON
from Visual
Analysis System
PHONEME GRAPHEME
LEVEL LEVEL
I
I
T
oral typing
spelling
writing
FIG. 6.1. Simple functional model of some of the cognitive processes involved in
spelling single words.
The semantic system, speech output lexicon and phoneme level are
components that should be familiar from Chapters 3 and 4. The graphemic
output lexicon contains all those words whose spellings have been committed
to memory. The reader will note that it receives two inputsone from the
semantic system and one from the speech output lexicon. This reflects the
belief among cognitive psychologists and neuropsychologists that the spelling
of a familiar word is retrieved in response to a dual specification ofits meaning
and sound-form. One line of evidence for this comesfromerrors made by skilled
writers known as slips of the pen. A spelling error occurs when a writer does
not know the correct spelling of a word, whereas in a slip of the pen the writer
knows how the word should be written, but a momentary lapse results in
something different being written.
64 6. WRITING AND SPELLING
of retaining the latter portion of a word while the earlier portion is being
written. That is the primary function of Hie grapheme levefi in Fig. 6.1.
The reader might be wondering why this new element in the model has
been termed the grapheme level rather than the letter level. Is this just
another case of psychologists using an obscure word where there is a
perfectly adequate and more familiar alternative? Well, hopefully not
entirely. The problem arises if one asks whether F and f are the same letter
or two different letters? If they are two different letters, what term should
be used to differentiate between them? Cognitive models of spelling and
writing assume that a words spelling is retrieved from the graphemic
output lexicon in the same form whether the word is to be written in upper
case (CAPITAL) or lower-case (small) letters or, for that matter, whether
it is to be written, typed or spelled aloud. The term grapheme has been
chosen to denote the relatively abstract representation of a letters identity
which is retrieved from the graphemic output lexicon and held at the
grapheme level and which is capable of being externalised in a variety of
different ways.
Surface Dysgraphia
The condition known as surface dyslexia, discussed in Chapter 4, is one
in which patients seem no longer able to recognise and read many once-
familiar words as whole units. Instead, they break them up and sound them
out as if they were unfamiliar. The result is a particular difficulty with
words that have irregular spellings and a tendency to regularise them. An
analogous condition has been identified in writing and termed surface
dysgraphia. As with surface dyslexia, it is usually caused by damage to
the left hemisphere of the brain (which in the majority of people is the
hemisphere primarily responsible for language).
Hatfield and Patterson (1983) described a patient T.P. who seemed to
have forgotten the conventional spellings of once-familiar words but
remained good at devising plausible spellings from the sound-forms of
words. The implication is that she has suffered damage affecting use of the
graphemic output lexicon but retained some use of connections between
the phoneme level and the grapheme level. Because the spellings of regular
words are, by definition, the spellings you would expect on the basis of
simple phoneme-grapheme Getter-sound) correspondences, T.P. was more
successful at generating correct spellings to regular than irregular words.
Her errors were predominantly regularisations, for example nephew
spelled as NEFFUE, biscuit as BISKET and subtle as SUTTEL.
T.P. managed to spell some irregular words correctly on occasion,
indicating that use of the graphemic output lexicon, though impaired, was
not completely abolished. Sometimes she made homophone errors even
when the word was dictated in a disambiguating sentence context (e.g.
misspelling sale as SAIL, write as RIGHT and sum as SOME). This
suggests that when she succeeded in retrieving the spelling of a word from
the graphemic output lexicon, it was predominantly in response to a
phonological input rather than a semantic input (i.e. she used the speech
output lexicon to graphemic output lexicon connection rather than the
connection from the semantic system).
When T.P. misspelled an irregular word, her errors sometimes
demonstrated that she had partial information about the words correct
spelling. For example, she once misspelled yacht as YHAGT,
demonstrating considerable knowledge of the eccentricities of that words
spelling. Other examples of this phenomenon include T.R misspelling
borough as PUROUGH and sword as SWARD. These errors are very
like the student spelling errors we earlier attributed to partial lexical
knowledge, but whereas the student writers had never fully memorised
68 6. WRITING AND SPELLING
the spellings of the words they erred on, it was the damage T.P. had incurred
to her graphemic output lexicon that sometimes prevented her from hilly
recalling the spelling of a word she once knew.
In summary, T.P. could sometimes retrieve all of the spelling of a word
from her graphemic output lexicon (evidenced by the fact that she could
sometimes spell irregular words correctly). Sometimes she could recall
something of a words spelling but not enough to spell it correctly. Often,
though, she could retrieve nothing from the graphemic output lexicon and
was forced to attempt to assemble a spelling using her preserved capacity
to map phonemes onto graphemes. Accounts of other patients with surface
dysgraphia can be found in Ellis and Young (1988) and McCarthy and
Warrington (1990).
Phonological Dysgraphia
Phonological dyslexia was discussed in Chapter 4 as a condition in which
patients show a relatively well-preserved ability to read familiar words
aloud, but are very poor at reading unfamiliar words or invented nonwords.
An analogous condition, phonological dysgraphia, can affect writing.
Shallice (1981) reported the case of a patient, P.R., who spelled over 90%
of a set of familiar words correctly but managed only two of ten simple
four-letter nonwords like SPID and none of ten six-letter nonwords like
FELUTE. When he managed to spell a nonword correctly, it appears to
have involved the mediation of a real word (just as one might spell LEV
correctly by stopping after the first three letters of LEVEL). Once again,
Ellis and Young (1988) and McCarthy and Warrington (1990) provide
further examples of this condition.
The experiments of Campbell (1983) and the analysis of the errors of
both skilled writers and the surface dysgraphic patient T.P. all point to an
interaction between the lexical procedure for whole-word spelling involving
the graphemic output lexicon and the sublexical procedure for spelling
unfamiliar words and nonwords that involves connections between the
phoneme level and the grapheme level. Nevertheless, the contrast between
surface dysgraphia (in which the whole-word procedure is impaired and
the sublexical procedure is intact) and phonological dysgraphia (in which
the reverse pattern is seen) suggests that these spelling procedures are to
some degree distinct and separable. Their separation into phonological and
surface dysgraphia provides what cognitive neuropsychologists call a
double dissociation between the whole-word and sublexical spelling
procedures. Such dissociations may be taken as evidence that there are
cognitive processes involved in whole-word spelling that are not necessary
for assembled, sublexical spelling, and vice-versa (see Shallice, 1988).
CENTRAL ACQUIRED DYSGRAPHIAS 69
Deep Dysgraphia
GESTALT
A-N/J (GRANNY) H K M F R . (HAMMER)
GESTALT
(goggles) ^l^TYVOTmO' (tomorrow)
LETTER ADDITIONS
U ^ GESTALT
1) j )
J> (LADDER) ^ PGESTALT
GESTALT
? P (UPPER)
^ w c J U &GESTALT
W f r GESTALT
(meeting) (chilly) (borrow)
STROKE OMISSIONS
GESTALT
K ^ GESTALT
N PP i f " v \ I q
(KEEN) (RABBIT)
(WIG)
STROKE ADDITIONS
m GESTALT
* * i n GESTALT GESTALT
^ L ft L
w /
(MARGIN) (REEF) (YELLOW)
FIG. 6.2. Examples of writing errors made by patient V.B. Reproduced with
permission from A.W. Ellis, A.W. Young, and B.M. Flude (1987). "Afferent dysgraphia"
in a patient and in normal subjects. Cognitive Neuropsychology, 4,465-486.
72
FURTHER READING 73
NOTES
1. This lexicon was referred to in the first edition of Reading, Writing and
Dyslexia as the graphemic word production system.
2. The cognitive system of Mortons model.
3. Referred to in the first edition of Reading, Writing and Dyslexia as the
"graphemic buffer.
FURTHER READING
Ellis, A.W. & Young, A.W. (1988). Human cognitive neuropsychology.
Hove, UK: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates Ltd.
Frith, U. (Ed.). (1980). Cognitive processes in spelling. London:
Academic Press.
Gregg, L.W. & Steinberg, E.R. (Eds.). (1980). Cognitive processes in
writing. Hillsdale, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates Inc.
Margolin, D.I. & Goodman-Schulman, R. (1992). Oral and written spelling
impairments. In D.I. Margolin (Ed.), Cognitive neuropsychology in
clinical practice. New York: Oxford University Press.
McCarthy, R.A. & Warrington, E.K (1990). Cognitive neuropsychology:
A clinical introduction. San Diego, CA: Academic Press.