Grammatical performance in children with dyslexia: the contributions of individual differences in phonological memory and statistical learning

Several studies have signaled grammatical difficulties in individuals with developmental dyslexia. These difficulties may stem from a phonological deficit, but may alternatively be explained through a domain-general deficit in statistical learning. This study investigates grammar in children with an...

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Veröffentlicht in:Applied psycholinguistics 2021-05, Vol.42 (3), p.791-821
Hauptverfasser: van Witteloostuijn, Merel, Boersma, Paul, Wijnen, Frank, Rispens, Judith
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Boersma, Paul
Wijnen, Frank
Rispens, Judith
description Several studies have signaled grammatical difficulties in individuals with developmental dyslexia. These difficulties may stem from a phonological deficit, but may alternatively be explained through a domain-general deficit in statistical learning. This study investigates grammar in children with and without dyslexia, and whether phonological memory and/or statistical learning ability contribute to individual differences in grammatical performance. We administered the CELF “word structure” and “recalling sentences” subtests and measures of phonological memory (digit span, nonword repetition) and statistical learning (serial reaction time, nonadjacent dependency learning) among 8- to 11-year-old children with and without dyslexia (N = 50 per group). Consistent with previous findings, our results show subtle difficulties in grammar, as children with dyslexia achieved lower scores on the CELF (word structure: p = .0027, recalling sentences: p = .053). While the two phonological memory measures were found to contribute to individual differences in grammatical performance, no evidence for a relationship with statistical learning was found. An error analysis revealed errors in irregular morphology (e.g., plural and past tense), suggesting problems with lexical retrieval. These findings are discussed in light of theoretical accounts of the underlying deficit in dyslexia.
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While the two phonological memory measures were found to contribute to individual differences in grammatical performance, no evidence for a relationship with statistical learning was found. An error analysis revealed errors in irregular morphology (e.g., plural and past tense), suggesting problems with lexical retrieval. 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source Cambridge University Press Journals Complete
subjects Children
Cognition & reasoning
Cognitive ability
Dyslexia
Error analysis
Individual differences
Language
Language Acquisition
Language Skills
Learning
Lexical access
Literacy
Memory
Morphology
Neurodevelopmental disorders
Original Article
Phonology
Reaction time
Sentence structure
Standardized Tests
Statistics
Syntax
Tense
Thinking Skills
Word structure
title Grammatical performance in children with dyslexia: the contributions of individual differences in phonological memory and statistical learning
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