Abstract

In this study, we examined eye movements and comprehension in sentences containing a relative clause. To date, few studies have focused on syntactic processing in dyslexia and so one goal of the study is to contribute to this gap in the experimental literature. A second goal is to contribute to theoretical psycholinguistic debate concerning the cause and the location of the processing difficulty associated with object-relative clauses. We compared dyslexic readers (n = 50) to a group of non-dyslexic controls (n = 50). We also assessed two key individual differences variables (working memory and verbal intelligence), which have been theorised to impact reading times and comprehension of subject- and object-relative clauses. The results showed that dyslexics and controls had similar comprehension accuracy. However, reading times showed participants with dyslexia spent significantly longer reading the sentences compared to controls (i.e., a main effect of dyslexia). In general, sentence type did not interact with dyslexia status. With respect to individual differences and the theoretical debate, we found that processing difficulty between the subject and object relatives was no longer significant when individual differences in working memory were controlled. Thus, our findings support theories, which assume that working memory demands are responsible for the processing difficulty incurred by (1) individuals with dyslexia and (2) object-relative clauses as compared to subject relative clauses.

Highlights

  • The purpose of the current study is to investigate the processing of subject- and object-extracted relative clauses, referred to as subject and object relatives

  • We explored the impact of two individual differences variables as potential key individual difference variables in the processing of subject- and object-relative clauses

  • We found three main findings with respect to this aim: individuals with dyslexia (1) achieved similar performance in terms of comprehension accuracy, (2) showed significantly longer reading times and (3) the effect of dyslexia was robust even when individual differences in verbal intelligence and working memory were controlled

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Summary

Introduction

The purpose of the current study is to investigate the processing of subject- and object-extracted relative clauses, referred to as subject and object relatives (see Table 1 for examples). Past research has identified that object relatives are consistently more difficult than subject relatives (e.g., [1,2,3]). The second goal of the study is to contribute to the theoretical debate concerning the source of processing difficulty between subject and object relatives. The second source of difficulty is working memory. Dyslexia presents a very interesting test of these theoretical debates, because dyslexia has been associated with deficits in both working memory [14,15] and linguistic prediction [16]. There is good reason to suspect that individuals with dyslexia will show both online processing and offline comprehension deficits with object-relative sentences

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