Publication | Closed Access
Phonological recoding deficit in working memory of dyslexic teenagers
93
Citations
0
References
2000
Year
Developmental Cognitive NeuroscienceRoot CauseNeurolinguisticsLanguage DevelopmentAtypical Language DevelopmentEducationPsycholinguisticsPicture Span PerformanceReading DisabilitiesSocial SciencesWriting DifficultiesChild LanguageCognitive DevelopmentWorking MemoryReading DifficultiesLanguage DisordersAphasiaNeuropsychological FunctioningCognitive ScienceSpeech Fluency DisorderDyslexic TeenagersLanguage DisorderNeuroscienceDevelopmental Deficits
The picture span performance of developmental dyslexic teenagers (mean age 14 years 1 month) was compared to the picture span performance of both RA (mean age 9 years 0 month) and chronological age match controls (mean age 14 years 1 month). Three stimulus lists were manipulated for visual and phonological similarity. Findings indicated that all three groups showed a significant phonological similarity effect but only the dyslexic group showed a significant visual similarity effect. The presence of dual visual‐verbal coding is postulated to be responsible for the ‘noisy’ encoding which others (e.g. Johnston and Anderson, 1998; Swan and Goswami, 1997) have suggested is a root cause of dyslexia. The results are discussed in terms of developmental deficits in the central executive of the working memory system.