Artigo Revisado por pares

Variation among developmental dyslexics: Evidence from a printed-word-learning task

2003; Elsevier BV; Volume: 87; Issue: 2 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1016/j.jecp.2003.10.004

ISSN

1096-0457

Autores

Caroline E. Bailey, Franklin R. Manis, William C. Pedersen, Mark S. Seidenberg,

Tópico(s)

Language Development and Disorders

Resumo

A word-learning task was used to investigate variation among developmental dyslexics classified as phonological and surface dyslexics. Dyslexic children and chronological age (CA)- and reading level (RL)-matched normal readers were taught to pronounce novel nonsense words such as veep. Words were assigned either a regular (e.g., “veep”) or an irregular (e.g., “vip”) pronunciation. Phonological dyslexics learned both regular and exception words more slowly than the normal readers and, unlike the other groups, did not show a regular-word advantage. Surface dyslexics also learned regular and exception words more slowly than the CA group, consistent with a specific problem in mastering arbitrary item-specific pronunciations, but their performance resembled that of the RL group. The results parallel earlier findings from Manis,Seidenberg, Doi, McBride-Chang, & Petersen [Cognition 58 (1996) 157–195] indicating that surface dyslexics and phonological dyslexics have a different profile of reading deficits, with surface dyslexics resembling younger normal readers and phonological dyslexics showing a specific phonological deficit. Models of reading and reading disability need to account for the heterogeneity in reading processes among dyslexic children.

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