Temporal processing in English-speaking and Chinese-speaking dyslexic children

Dyslexia is a developmental disorder characterised by difficulties in reading acquisition in a context of appropriate tuition, socio-cultural opportunities and normal intelligence. A large amount of research has been carried out in the attempt to understand the biological and cognitive causes of dys...

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Main Author: McKirdy, James
Published: University of Aberdeen 2003
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Online Access:http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.430384
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spelling ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-4303842015-03-19T07:49:05ZTemporal processing in English-speaking and Chinese-speaking dyslexic childrenMcKirdy, James2003Dyslexia is a developmental disorder characterised by difficulties in reading acquisition in a context of appropriate tuition, socio-cultural opportunities and normal intelligence. A large amount of research has been carried out in the attempt to understand the biological and cognitive causes of dyslexia but to date no unified theory has been finalised. Recent studies have suggested that auditory temporal sequencing abilities might be played a part in skilled reading acquisition. The results of these studies, however, are not unanimous, and replication success has been limited. A further controversial point for the auditory temporal deficit theory is whether it would be able to account for the presence of dyslexia in languages that rely more heavily on logographic processing rather than auditory processing, such as Chinese. The aim of this dissertation was to explore the role of auditory temporal processing skills in reading acquisition using a cross-cultural and developmental approach. The results of the different experiments found no support for a pervasive role of temporal processing skills in reading acquisition in both English-and Chinese speaking samples. Differential levels of performance achievement were seen in dyslexic children in both languages, and also in normal development. Reading skills and temporal processing skills appeared to improve as function of increased age. As the temporal processing tasks used in these studies loaded heavily on working memory, further testing of this latter function showed that working memory skills did not account for the differences between the groups. In conclusion, these studies have contributed to clarify that temporal processing abilities do not play a major role in reading achievement and indicate that no current interpretation appears to be able to account for the variety of symptoms demonstrated by dyslexic children and adults as well as dyslexia in different languages.371.9144University of Aberdeenhttp://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.430384Electronic Thesis or Dissertation
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sources NDLTD
topic 371.9144
spellingShingle 371.9144
McKirdy, James
Temporal processing in English-speaking and Chinese-speaking dyslexic children
description Dyslexia is a developmental disorder characterised by difficulties in reading acquisition in a context of appropriate tuition, socio-cultural opportunities and normal intelligence. A large amount of research has been carried out in the attempt to understand the biological and cognitive causes of dyslexia but to date no unified theory has been finalised. Recent studies have suggested that auditory temporal sequencing abilities might be played a part in skilled reading acquisition. The results of these studies, however, are not unanimous, and replication success has been limited. A further controversial point for the auditory temporal deficit theory is whether it would be able to account for the presence of dyslexia in languages that rely more heavily on logographic processing rather than auditory processing, such as Chinese. The aim of this dissertation was to explore the role of auditory temporal processing skills in reading acquisition using a cross-cultural and developmental approach. The results of the different experiments found no support for a pervasive role of temporal processing skills in reading acquisition in both English-and Chinese speaking samples. Differential levels of performance achievement were seen in dyslexic children in both languages, and also in normal development. Reading skills and temporal processing skills appeared to improve as function of increased age. As the temporal processing tasks used in these studies loaded heavily on working memory, further testing of this latter function showed that working memory skills did not account for the differences between the groups. In conclusion, these studies have contributed to clarify that temporal processing abilities do not play a major role in reading achievement and indicate that no current interpretation appears to be able to account for the variety of symptoms demonstrated by dyslexic children and adults as well as dyslexia in different languages.
author McKirdy, James
author_facet McKirdy, James
author_sort McKirdy, James
title Temporal processing in English-speaking and Chinese-speaking dyslexic children
title_short Temporal processing in English-speaking and Chinese-speaking dyslexic children
title_full Temporal processing in English-speaking and Chinese-speaking dyslexic children
title_fullStr Temporal processing in English-speaking and Chinese-speaking dyslexic children
title_full_unstemmed Temporal processing in English-speaking and Chinese-speaking dyslexic children
title_sort temporal processing in english-speaking and chinese-speaking dyslexic children
publisher University of Aberdeen
publishDate 2003
url http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.430384
work_keys_str_mv AT mckirdyjames temporalprocessinginenglishspeakingandchinesespeakingdyslexicchildren
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