Publication | Closed Access
Visual Processing of Verbal and Nonverbal Stimuli in Adolescents with Reading Disabilities
36
Citations
25
References
1999
Year
DisabilityEducationPsycholinguisticsReading DisabilitiesDevelopmental DisabilitiesSocial SciencesPsychologyCognitive DevelopmentReading DifficultiesReadingVisual Information ProcessingSpecific Learning DisorderDevelopmental DisabilityCognitive ScienceRehabilitationVisual ProcessingLanguage DisorderNonverbal StimuliVisual InformationSpecial Education
This study investigated whether a group of children with reading disabilities (RD) were slower at processing visual information in general (compared to a group of children of comparable age and a group of children of comparable reading level), or whether their deficit was specific to the written word. Computerized backward masking and temporal integration tasks were used to assess the speed of visual information processing. Stimulus complexity (simple, complex) and type (verbal, nonverbal) were varied, creating a 2 x 2 matrix of stimulus conditions: simple nonverbal, complex nonverbal, simple verbal, and complex verbal. Adolescents with RD demonstrated difficulties in processing rapidly presented verbal and nonverbal visual stimuli, although the effect was magnified when they were processing verbal stimuli. Thus, the results of this study suggest that some youth with reading disabilities have visual temporal processing deficits that compound difficulties in processing verbal information during reading.
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