Abstract

Developmental dyslexia is a reading disorder characterized by problems in accurate or fluent reading. A deficiency in phonological processing is thought to underpin the reading difficulties of individuals with developmental dyslexia and a variety of explanations have been proposed including deficits in phonological awareness and verbal memory. Recent investigations have begun to suggest that developmental deficits in the acquisition of reading may also co-occur with visual processing deficits, which are particularly salient for visually complex stimuli, yet these deficits have received relatively little attention from researchers. To further explore the nature of phonological and visual processing in developmental dyslexia, we administered a series of non-reading tasks tapping both domains. Unsurprisingly, individuals with developmental dyslexia performed worse than typically developing readers in phonological tasks. More intriguingly, they also struggled with visual tasks, specifically when discriminating between novel visual patterns, and in visuo-spatial working memory, which requires greater attentional control. These findings highlight that individuals with developmental dyslexia present not only with phonological impairments but also difficulties in processing visual materials. This aspect has received limited attention in previous literature and represents an aspect of novelty of this study. The dual phonological and visual impairments suggest that developmental dyslexia is a complex disorder characterized by deficits in different cognitive mechanisms that underpin reading.

Highlights

  • Reviewed by: Norbert Maïonchi-Pino, UMR6024 Laboratoire de Psychologie Sociale et Cognitive (LAPSCO), France Jing Zhao, Capital Normal University, China

  • Recent investigations have begun to suggest that developmental deficits in the acquisition of reading may co-occur with visual processing deficits, which are salient for visually complex stimuli, yet these deficits have received relatively little attention from researchers

  • The aim of this study was to investigate whether individuals with Developmental dyslexia (DD) present with linguistic impairments only, which are well captured by the DRC model, or if they present with impairments in the visual domain in addition to phonological impairments, a position that aligns more closely with the triangle model

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Summary

Introduction

Reviewed by: Norbert Maïonchi-Pino, UMR6024 Laboratoire de Psychologie Sociale et Cognitive (LAPSCO), France Jing Zhao, Capital Normal University, China. They struggled with visual tasks, when discriminating between novel visual patterns, and in visuo-spatial working memory, which requires greater attentional control These findings highlight that individuals with developmental dyslexia present with phonological impairments and difficulties in processing visual materials. The cognitive basis of DD is thought to be a phonological deficit and, sometimes, this is proposed as the unique cause (Bruck, 1992; Swan and Goswami, 1997; Ramus, 2001; Vellutino, 2004) This view is widely accepted, and underpins one of the primary models explaining the reading disorder in DD, the Dual-Route Cascaded model, DRC (Coltheart et al, 2001).

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