Abstract

Deficits in the visual attention span (VAS) are thought to hamper reading performance in dyslexic individuals. However, the causal relationship between VAS deficits and reading disability remains unclear. The present study attempts to address this issue by using a VAS-based intervention to explore the possible influence of VAS on reading processes in Chinese children with dyslexia. Given the influence of the heterogeneity of dyslexia on intervention effects, VAS-impaired dyslexic and VAS-intact dyslexic individuals were separately trained. Therefore, there were five groups of participants in this study, including 10 trained dyslexic individuals with VAS deficits and 10 untrained dyslexic individuals with VAS dysfunction as the baseline reference, 10 trained and 10 untrained dyslexic individuals with an intact VAS, and fourteen age-matched normal readers for reference of normal level. All participants completed reading measures and a visual 1-back task, reflecting VAS capacity with non-verbal stimuli and non-verbal responses, before and after VAS-based training. VAS-based training tasks included a length estimation task regarding the bottom-up attention, visual search and digit cancelling tasks targeting top-down attentional modulation, and visual tracking tasks to train eye-movement control. The results showed that visual training only helped improve VAS skills in VAS-impaired dyslexic individuals receiving training. Meanwhile, their silent sentence reading accuracy improved after training, and there was a significant relationship between training improvements in VAS function and reading performance. The current findings suggest that VAS-based training has a far-transfer effect on linguistic level (i.e., fluent reading). These findings suggest the possibility that VAS-related training may help children with dyslexia improve their reading skills.

Highlights

  • We focused on examining whether there were significant improvements in both visual attention span (VAS) capacity and reading skills after VAS-impaired dyslexic individuals received VAS-related training; in addition, we investigated the correlation between the possible training effects on VAS ability and reading performance

  • In detail, untrained VAS-impaired dyslexic individuals were recruited as a baseline reference group to exclude the possible influence of changes related to natural growth, and age-matched normal readers were recruited as a normal control reference group to examine whether VAS ability in the trained VAS-impaired individuals with Developmental dyslexia (DD) approached or reached normal levels after the intervention

  • The results showed that a period of training focusing on two subcomponents of the VAS could lead to enhanced performance in the visual 1-back task, and this improvement was only present in Chinese dyslexic readers with VAS dysfunction and not in the dyslexic children with intact VAS capacity

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Summary

Methods

Twenty dyslexic children with VAS deficits (6 girls), twenty dyslexic children with normal VAS function (5 girls), and fourteen chronological-age-matched typically developing children (7 girls) participated in the present study and were selected from the 4th to 6th grades of one primary school. Both types of dyslexic children were randomly and divided into trained and nontrained groups. We began by adopting a standardized vocabulary test and a nonverbal intelligence test to screen children with dyslexia, as these tests are commonly.

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