Reading in French-speaking adults with dyslexia.

Jennifer Martin, Pascale Colé, Christel Leuwers, Séverine Casalis, Michel Zorman, Liliane Sprenger-Charolles
Author Information
  1. Jennifer Martin: University of Provence, MARSEILLE, Cedex 3, France.

Abstract

This study investigated the reading and reading-related skills of 15 French-speaking adults with dyslexia, whose performance was compared with that of chronological-age controls (CA) and reading-level controls (RL). Experiment 1 assessed the efficiency of their phonological reading-related skills (phonemic awareness, phonological short-term memory, and rapid automatic naming (RAN)) and experiment 2 assessed the efficiency of their lexical and sublexical (or phonological) reading procedures (reading aloud of pseudowords and irregular words of different lengths). Experiment 1 revealed that adults with dyslexia exhibited lower phonological reading-related skills than CAs only, and were better than RL controls on the RAN. In experiment 2, as compared with RL controls, only a deficit in the sublexical reading procedure was observed. The results of the second experiment replicated observations from English-language studies but not those of the first experiment. Several hypotheses are discussed to account for these results, including one related to the transparency of orthographic systems.

MeSH Term

Adolescent
Adult
Awareness
Cognition Disorders
Dyslexia
Female
France
Humans
Language
Male
Memory, Short-Term
Phonation
Phonetics
Reading
Reference Values
Verbal Learning
Young Adult

Word Cloud

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