Language deficits in dyslexic children: speech perception, phonology, and morphology.
نویسندگان
چکیده
We investigated the relationship between dyslexia and three aspects of language: speech perception, phonology, and morphology. Reading and language tasks were administered to dyslexics aged 8-9 years and to two normal reader groups (age-matched and reading-level matched). Three dyslexic groups were identified: phonological dyslexics (PD), developmentally language impaired (LI), and globally delayed (delay-type dyslexics). The LI and PD groups exhibited similar patterns of reading impairment, attributed to low phonological skills. However, only the LI group showed clear speech perception deficits, suggesting that such deficits affect only a subset of dyslexics. Results also indicated phonological impairments in children whose speech perception was normal. Both the LI and the PD groups showed inflectional morphology difficulties, with the impairment being more severe in the LI group. The delay group's reading and language skills closely matched those of younger normal readers, suggesting these children had a general delay in reading and language skills, rather than a specific phonological impairment. The results are discussed in terms of models of word recognition and dyslexia.
منابع مشابه
Categorical speech perception deficits distinguish language and reading impairments in children.
We examined categorical speech perception in school-age children with developmental dyslexia or Specific Language Impairment (SLI), compared to age-matched and younger controls. Stimuli consisted of synthetic speech tokens in which place of articulation varied from 'b' to 'd'. Children were tested on categorization, categorization in noise, and discrimination. Phonological awareness skills were...
متن کاملThe role of anchoring in auditory and speech perception in the general and in dyslexic populations
Theoretical treatments of language, reading and their disorders are typically modular. They postulate that because individuals with (for instance) dyslexia are more impaired in their reading than in any other cognitive domain, the core deficit(s) should be traced back to a specific cognitive process that is critical for reading, but not for other functions (see Vellutino, Fletcher, Snowling, & ...
متن کاملLecture et prosodie chez l'enfant dyslexique, le cas des pauses (Reading and prosody in dyslexic children, pause patterns) [in French]
________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Reading and prosody in dyslexic children, pause patterns Dyslexia is widely associated with a deficit in phonological awareness. Only few works in suprasegmental phonology showed that prosody is involved in the processes of decoding and reading comprehension. We developed a corpus (DySpoLec)...
متن کاملPerformance of dyslexic children on speech perception tests.
Several researchers who have compared the performance of dyslexic and normal-reading children on a variety of different tasks have suggested that dyslexic children may have subtle deficits in the phonemic analysis of spoken as well as written language. Thus it is of interest to know how children who have extraordinary difficulty learning to read can perform explicitly auditory-phonetic tasks. S...
متن کاملA Systematic Review of the Effectiveness of Early Intervention and the Role of Parents in Language Development of Hearing Loss Children
Objectives: Deaf and hard-of-hearing children are slow in language development, and language deficits are common in hearing-impaired children. Here, all areas of the language, including syntax, morphology, phonology, semantic and pragmatic, are involved, and this leads to a deficiency in reading and academic skills. Evidence shows that through early intervention, we can minimize or eliminate pr...
متن کاملذخیره در منابع من
با ذخیره ی این منبع در منابع من، دسترسی به آن را برای استفاده های بعدی آسان تر کنید
عنوان ژورنال:
- Journal of experimental child psychology
دوره 77 1 شماره
صفحات -
تاریخ انتشار 2000