4.2 Article

Visual deficits in developmental dyslexia: Relationships between non-linguistic visual tasks and their contribution to components of reading

Journal

DYSLEXIA
Volume 14, Issue 2, Pages 95-115

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/dys.345

Keywords

dyslexia; magnocellular; dorsal stream; letter position encoding

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Developmental dyslexia is often characterized by a visual deficit, but the nature of this impairment and how it relates to reading ability is disputed (Brain 2003; 126: 841-865). In order to investigate this issue, we compared groups of adults with and without dyslexia on the Ternus, visual-search and symbols tasks. Dyslexic readers yielded more errors on the visual-search and symbols tasks compared with non-dyslexic readers. A positive correlation between visual-search and symbols task performance suggests a common mechanism shared by these tasks. Performance on the visual-search and symbols tasks also correlated with non-word reading and rapid automatized naming measures, and visual search contributed independent variance to non-word reading. The Ternus task did not discriminate reading groups nor contributed significant variance to reading measures. We consider how visual-attention processes might underlie specific component reading measures. Copyright (c) 2007 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

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