Abstract
The aim of this experiment was to investigate the use of orthographic analogies in conditions that involved making sense of print (pictureâword matching) and pronouncing print (reading aloud) for readers with dyslexia. An adapted version of the classic clueâword paradigm developed by Goswami was used. Participants were 40 readers with dyslexia and 40 readingâageâmatched comparison readers. Based on previous theory and research in this area, we predicted that readers with dyslexia would read significantly fewer analogous words than their readingâageâmatched counterparts. In light of the supposition that wordâpicture matching does not require the synthesised pronunciation of a word, we also predicted that readers with dyslexia might be less impaired at analogy use in the pictureâword matching than in the reading aloud condition. However, we found that the dyslexic group read significantly fewer analogous words at postâtest than their readingâageâmatched peers in both conditions. Also, performance in overall word reading was better for both groups in the wordâpicture matching condition. The implications of these results for theory and practice in reading development are discussed, and methodological limitations are noted.
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