TY - JOUR
T1 - Spoken word learning differences among children with dyslexia, concomitant dyslexia and developmental language disorder, and typical development
AU - Alt, Mary
AU - Gray, Shelley
AU - Hogan, Tiffany P.
AU - Schlesinger, Nora
AU - Cowan, Nelson
N1 - Funding Information:
2Participants in this article represent a portion of the participants from a larger sample in the Profiles of Working Memory and Word Learning (POWWER) study, funded by National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders Grant R01 DC010784. The POWWER study includes the groups reported, as well as bilingual children with TD. Participants in the POWWER study completed a total of six word learning games and a comprehensive battery of working memory tasks (see Cabbage et al., 2017), completed over the course of at least 6 days. Data on a subset of the groups with TD and dyslexia were reported in Alt et al. (2017) and Baron et al. (2018). Data on a subset of all three groups were reported in Cowan et al. (2017). POWWER word learning results have also been published in Arizmendi et al. (2018), Erikson et al. (2018), Gray et al. (2017), and Green et al. (2016).
Funding Information:
This work was supported by funding from National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders Grant R01 DC010784 (PI: Shelley Gray). We are deeply grateful to the staff, research associates, school administrators, teachers, children, and families who participated. Key personnel included (in alphabetical order) Shara Brinkley, Katy Cabbage, Gary Carstensen, Cecilia Figueroa, Karen Guilmette, Trudy Kuo, Bjorg LeSueur, Annelise Pesch, and Jean Zimmer. Many students also contributed to this work, including (in alphabetical order) Genesis Arizmendi, Lauren Baron, Alexander Brown, Nora Schlesinger, Nisha Talanki, and Hui-Chun Yang. We gratefully acknowledge the important contributions of our late colleague and co-investigator Sam Green in the conceptualization and design of the research leading to this article.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2019 American Speech-Language-Hearing Association
PY - 2019/10
Y1 - 2019/10
N2 - Purpose: The purpose of our study was to test the hypotheses (a) that children with dyslexia have spoken word learning deficits primarily related to phonology and (b) that children with dyslexia and concomitant developmental language disorder (DLD) have word learning deficits related to both phonology and semantic processing when compared to peers with typical development ( TD). Method: Second-graders with dyslexia (n = 82), concomitant dyslexia and DLD (dyslexia + DLD; n = 40), and TD (n = 167) learned names and semantic features for cartoon monsters in 5 carefully controlled word learning tasks that varied phonological and semantic demands. The computer-based tasks were played in 6 different word learning games. We analyzed results using Bayesian statistics. Results: In general, the dyslexia + DLD group showed lower accuracy on tasks compared to the dyslexia and TD groups. As predicted, word learning tasks that taxed phonology revealed deficits in the dyslexia group, although there were some exceptions related to visual complexity. Word learning deficits in the dyslexia + DLD group were present in tasks that taxed phonology, semantic processing, or both. Conclusions: The dyslexia + DLD group demonstrated word learning deficits across the range of word learning tasks that tapped phonology and semantic processing, whereas the dyslexia group primarily struggled with the phonological aspects of word learning.
AB - Purpose: The purpose of our study was to test the hypotheses (a) that children with dyslexia have spoken word learning deficits primarily related to phonology and (b) that children with dyslexia and concomitant developmental language disorder (DLD) have word learning deficits related to both phonology and semantic processing when compared to peers with typical development ( TD). Method: Second-graders with dyslexia (n = 82), concomitant dyslexia and DLD (dyslexia + DLD; n = 40), and TD (n = 167) learned names and semantic features for cartoon monsters in 5 carefully controlled word learning tasks that varied phonological and semantic demands. The computer-based tasks were played in 6 different word learning games. We analyzed results using Bayesian statistics. Results: In general, the dyslexia + DLD group showed lower accuracy on tasks compared to the dyslexia and TD groups. As predicted, word learning tasks that taxed phonology revealed deficits in the dyslexia group, although there were some exceptions related to visual complexity. Word learning deficits in the dyslexia + DLD group were present in tasks that taxed phonology, semantic processing, or both. Conclusions: The dyslexia + DLD group demonstrated word learning deficits across the range of word learning tasks that tapped phonology and semantic processing, whereas the dyslexia group primarily struggled with the phonological aspects of word learning.
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U2 - 10.1044/2019_LSHSS-VOIA-18-0138
DO - 10.1044/2019_LSHSS-VOIA-18-0138
M3 - Article
C2 - 31600465
AN - SCOPUS:85073095082
SN - 0161-1461
VL - 50
SP - 540
EP - 561
JO - Language, speech, and hearing services in schools
JF - Language, speech, and hearing services in schools
IS - 4
ER -