Book Chapter10.4324/9781315108346-18
Beneath the Surface of Developmental Dyslexia
Uta Frith
- 03 Nov 2017
- pp 301-330
1.5K
TL;DR: The lack of a clear concept of developmental disorders has not helped the still faintly burning controversy as to whether developmental dyslexia exists, although there are other reasons for the controversy.
read more
Abstract: The progress in understanding of acquired dyslexia was due not to such collections of empirical data, but rather to the fruitful application of detailed information-processing models to reading failure. The new definition of developmental dyslexia as developmental arrest has some important implications. The lack of a clear concept of developmental disorders has not helped the still faintly burning controversy as to whether developmental dyslexia exists, although there are other reasons for the controversy as well. These children were able to acquire a considerable sight-word vocabulary, but, when compared with normal children from the same school who had a similar sight vocabulary, showed a greatly impaired phonetic spelling strategy. Relevant to this question is the often-quoted absence of classic developmental dyslexia in Japan. The frequent failure to find evidence for a large variety of subtypes in developmental dyslexia cannot be ignored and constitutes a glaring difference to studies in acquired dyslexia.
read more
Chat with Paper
AI Agents for this Paper
Find similar papers on Google Scholar, PubMed and Arxiv
Write a critical review of this paper
Analyze citations of this paper to find unaddressed research gaps
Citations
Segmentation, not rhyming, predicts early progress in learning to read.
TL;DR: Segmentation was strongly correlated with attainment in reading and spelling at the end of the first year at school, though Rhyming was not, and rhyming had started to exert a predictive effect of spelling, but not on reading.
498
The influence of orthographic consistency on reading development: word recognition in English and German children
Heinz Wimmer,Usha Goswami +1 more
TL;DR: Whereas reading time and error rates in numeral and number word reading were very similar across the two orthographies, the German children showed a big advantage in reading the nonsense words, interpreted as evidence for the initial adoption of different strategies for word recognition in the two Orthographies.
477
Orthographic learning at a glance: on the time course and developmental onset of self-teaching.
TL;DR: In contrast to the findings from less regular orthographies such as English and Dutch, beginning readers of a highly regular orthography (Hebrew) appear to be relatively insensitive to word-specific orthographic detail, reading in a nonlexical "surface" fashion.
461
Brain sensitivity to print emerges when children learn letter–speech sound correspondences
Silvia Brem,Silvia Bach,Silvia Bach,Karin Kucian,Tomi K. Guttorm,Ernst Martin,Heikki Lyytinen,Daniel Brandeis,Ulla Richardson +8 more
TL;DR: The occipito-temporal print sensitivity thus is established during the earliest phase of reading acquisition in childhood, suggesting that a crucial part of the later reading network first adopts a role in mapping print and sound.
453
Does reading develop in a sequence of stages
Morag Stuart,Max Coltheart +1 more
TL;DR: The results of the study suggest that phonological awareness and reading acquisition have a reciprocal interactive causal relationship, not a unidirectional one, and phonological skills can play a role in the very first stage of learning to read among phonologically adept children.
445
References
Developmental and acquired dyslexia: A comparison.
TL;DR: It is concluded that developmental dyslexics differ from the patients studied by Patterson and Marcel in demonstrating a pattern of reading which, though slow, is qualitatively similar to the reading of normal readers of a younger age.
123