Abstract

In reading aloud, the eye typically leads over voice position. In the present study, eye movements and voice utterances were simultaneously recorded and tracked during the reading of a meaningful text to evaluate the eye-voice lead in 16 dyslexic and 16 same-age control readers. Dyslexic children were slower than control peers in reading texts. Their slowness was characterized by a great number of silent pauses and sounding-out behaviors and a small lengthening of word articulation times. Regarding eye movements, dyslexic readers made many more eye fixations (and generally smaller rightward saccades) than controls. Eye movements and voice (which were shifted in time because of the eye-voice lead) were synchronized in dyslexic readers as well as controls. As expected, the eye-voice lead was significantly smaller in dyslexic than control readers, confirming early observations by Buswell (1921) and Fairbanks (1937). The eye-voice lead was significantly correlated with several eye movements and voice parameters, particularly number of fixations and silent pauses. The difference in performance between dyslexic and control readers across several eye and voice parameters was expressed by a ratio of about 2. We propose that referring to proportional differences allows for a parsimonious interpretation of the reading deficit in terms of a single deficit in word decoding. The possible source of this deficit may call for visual or phonological mechanisms, including Goswami's temporal sampling framework.

Highlights

  • Reading aloud is a complex task that requires the synchronization of various subtasks or subcomponents which impinge on different ongoing fluxes of information

  • RATIOS IN THE COMPARISON OF GROUP PERFORMANCE Across several eye movement and voice parameters, performance of dyslexic and control readers was expressed by a ratio of about 2

  • Overall, the results of the present study allow for a comprehensive description of the reading profile of dyslexic and control readers during the reading of a text, including several eye and voice parameters and accuracy measures

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Summary

Introduction

Reading aloud is a complex task that requires the synchronization of various subtasks or subcomponents which impinge on different ongoing fluxes of information. Scientific research tries to isolate different sub-tasks (using appropriate parameters), because complex behaviors are more difficult to study. This is true in the study of reading and its disorders. As to the visual scanning of texts, research on eye movements has mainly examined the silent reading of lists of words or words embedded in simple sentences, and has avoided the complexities linked to the synchronization of voice outflow and limited the requests for text comprehension (Rayner, 2009)

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