Title of article
Auditory temporal processing and dyslexia in an orthographically consistent language
Author/Authors
Georgiou، نويسنده , , George K. and Protopapas، نويسنده , , Athanassios and Papadopoulos، نويسنده , , Timothy C. and Skaloumbakas، نويسنده , , Christos and Parrila، نويسنده , , Rauno، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2010
Pages
15
From page
1330
To page
1344
Abstract
We examined two hypotheses relating auditory processing to dyslexia in Greek, an orthographically consistent language. Study I examined the “P-center” or “beat detection” hypothesis (Goswami et al., 2002) in a sample of Grade 6 dyslexics, Grade 6 chronological age (CA) controls, and Grade 4 reading age (RA) controls. Study II examined the “temporal processing,” or “rapid auditory processing” hypothesis (Tallal, 1980) in a sample of Grade 7 dyslexics, CA controls, and in two groups of CA matched children with low frequency discrimination or low tone sequencing performance. Both studies indicate that (a) as a group, dyslexic children did not perform significantly worse on auditory processing measures than the control groups; (b) measures of auditory processing mostly did not account for unique amount of variance in phonological processing, reading, or spelling; and (c) at an individual level of analysis, some of the dyslexic children experienced auditory temporal processing deficits. Implications on the importance of auditory processing in reading in orthographically consistent languages are discussed.
Keywords
Dyslexia , auditory temporal processing , Beat detection , frequency discrimination , Orthographically consistent language
Journal title
Cortex
Serial Year
2010
Journal title
Cortex
Record number
2300581
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