In:
Developmental Science, Wiley, Vol. 24, No. 3 ( 2021-05)
Abstract:
A form‐preparation task in the language production field was adopted to examine output phonological representations in Chinese dyslexia and their susceptibility to training. Forty‐one Chinese children with dyslexia (7–11 years old) and 36 chronological age controls completed this task. The controls demonstrated a marginally significant syllable facilitation effect ( d = −0.13), indicating their use of syllable‐sized phonological representations during speech production, while the group with dyslexia showed a significantly different pattern ( d = 0.04), opposite to the direction of a facilitation effect. The children with dyslexia were then randomly assigned to either metalinguistic training ( N = 22) or working memory training ( N = 19). Only the metalinguistic training subgroup demonstrated a significant syllable facilitation effect afterward (metalinguistic: d = −0.13; working memory: d = −0.01). The results suggest the presence of a phonological representation deficit at the syllable level in Chinese dyslexia and its possible remediation by metalinguistic training. Such a phonological deficit in readers of a logographic script strongly supports the impaired phonological representation view of developmental dyslexia. A video abstract of this article can be viewed at https://youtu.be/zT2Be0xMkh0 .
Type of Medium:
Online Resource
ISSN:
1363-755X
,
1467-7687
Language:
English
Publisher:
Wiley
Publication Date:
2021
detail.hit.zdb_id:
1406101-6
detail.hit.zdb_id:
2023952-X
SSG:
5,2