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Are speech perception deficits associated with developmental dyslexia?

Authors :
Benjamin Munson
Catherine McBride-Chang
Alan B. Petersen
Lisa M. Doi
Patricia A. Keating
Mark S. Seidenberg
Franklin R. Manis
Source :
Journal of experimental child psychology. 66(2)
Publication Year :
1997

Abstract

Phonological awareness and phoneme identification tasks were administered to dyslexic children and both chronological age (CA) and reading-level (RL) comparison groups. Dyslexic children showed less sharply defined categorical perception of a bath-path continuum varying voice onset time when compared to the CA but not the RL group. The dyslexic children were divided into two subgroups based on phoneme awareness. Dyslexics with low phonemic awareness made poorer /b/-/p/ distinctions than both CA and RL groups, but dyslexics with normal phonemic awareness did not. Examination of individual profiles revealed that the majority of subjects in each group exhibited normal categorical perception. However, 7 of 25 dyslexics had abnormal identification functions, compared to 1 subject in the CA group and 3 in the RL group. The results suggest that some dyslexic children have a perceptual deficit that may interfere with processing of phonological information. Speech perception difficulties may also be partially related to reading experience.

Details

ISSN :
00220965
Volume :
66
Issue :
2
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of experimental child psychology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....828929ca8c8b6792894cdd559a3614d2