Impaired sensitivity to dynamic stimuli in poor readers of a regular orthography |
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Authors: | Talcott Joel B Gram Aashild Van Ingelghem Mieke Witton Caroline Stein John F Toennessen Finn Egil |
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Affiliation: | Behavioural and Cognitive Sciences Research Group, Neurosciences Research Institute, Psychology, 5th Floor Main Building, Aston University, Birmingham, UK. j.b.talcott@aston.ac.uk |
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Abstract: | The mappings from grapheme to phoneme are much less consistent in English than they are for most other languages. Therefore, the differences found between English-speaking dyslexics and controls on sensory measures of temporal processing might be related more to the irregularities of English orthography than to a general deficit affecting reading ability in all languages. However, here we show that poor readers of Norwegian, a language with a relatively regular orthography, are less sensitive than controls to dynamic visual and auditory stimuli. Consistent with results from previous studies of English-readers, detection thresholds for visual motion and auditory frequency modulation (FM) were significantly higher in 19 poor readers of Norwegian compared to 22 control readers of the same age. Over two-thirds (68.4%) of the children identified as poor readers were less sensitive than controls to either or both of the visual coherent motion or auditory 2Hz FM stimuli. |
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