We report a series of experiments designed to explore the locus of the phonological deficit in dyslexia. Phonological processing of dyslexic adults is compared to that of age- and IQ-matched controls. Dyslexics ’ impaired performance on tasks involving nonwords suggests that sub-lexical phonological representations are deficient. Contrasting nonword repetition vs auditory nonword discrimination suggests that dyslexics are specifically impaired in input phonological processing. These data are compatible with the hypothesis that the deficit initially affects input sub-lexical processes, and further spreads to output and lexical processes in the course of language acquisition. Further longitudinal research is required to confirm this scenario ...
Children with dyslexia and/or specific language impairment have marked deficits in phonological proc...
This literature review looks at dyslexia from a behavioural, neurological, and genetic perspective t...
International audienceCross-linguistic studies suggest that phonological deficittends to be a univer...
This thesis firstly reviews the nature of the phonological deficit in developmental dyslexia. An est...
Beyond the well-known reading and spelling difficulties, dyslexic individuals exhibit marked phonolo...
It is widely accepted that developmental dyslexia results from some sort of phonological deficit. Ye...
Aim of this work is to analyze thoroughly the most peculiar aspects of Developmental Dyslexia, focus...
This paper reviews evidence in support of the phonological deficit hypothesis of dyslexia. Findings ...
Lexical access and phonological decoding were tested in 100 normal adult readers and 21 adult dyslex...
Despite the evidence for a core phonological deficit in dyslexia, the nature of this deficit at the ...
The present thesis tested the hypothesis of Stanovich, Siegel, & Gottardo (1997) that surface dyslex...
As phonological processing difficulties appear to be a central feature related to dyslexia, research...
PURPOSE: To verify the universal nature of the phonological processing deficit hypothesis for dyslex...
There is growing agreement that people with dyslexia have difficulty processing speech sounds. Propo...
The present thesis tested the hypothesis of Stanovich, Siegel, & Gottardo (1997) that surface dyslex...
Children with dyslexia and/or specific language impairment have marked deficits in phonological proc...
This literature review looks at dyslexia from a behavioural, neurological, and genetic perspective t...
International audienceCross-linguistic studies suggest that phonological deficittends to be a univer...
This thesis firstly reviews the nature of the phonological deficit in developmental dyslexia. An est...
Beyond the well-known reading and spelling difficulties, dyslexic individuals exhibit marked phonolo...
It is widely accepted that developmental dyslexia results from some sort of phonological deficit. Ye...
Aim of this work is to analyze thoroughly the most peculiar aspects of Developmental Dyslexia, focus...
This paper reviews evidence in support of the phonological deficit hypothesis of dyslexia. Findings ...
Lexical access and phonological decoding were tested in 100 normal adult readers and 21 adult dyslex...
Despite the evidence for a core phonological deficit in dyslexia, the nature of this deficit at the ...
The present thesis tested the hypothesis of Stanovich, Siegel, & Gottardo (1997) that surface dyslex...
As phonological processing difficulties appear to be a central feature related to dyslexia, research...
PURPOSE: To verify the universal nature of the phonological processing deficit hypothesis for dyslex...
There is growing agreement that people with dyslexia have difficulty processing speech sounds. Propo...
The present thesis tested the hypothesis of Stanovich, Siegel, & Gottardo (1997) that surface dyslex...
Children with dyslexia and/or specific language impairment have marked deficits in phonological proc...
This literature review looks at dyslexia from a behavioural, neurological, and genetic perspective t...
International audienceCross-linguistic studies suggest that phonological deficittends to be a univer...