Disentangling dyslexia : phonological and processing deficit in developmental dyslexia
Beyond the well-known reading and spelling difficulties, dyslexic individuals exhibit marked phonological disorders, poor lexical retrieval and problems in the comprehension and production of grammatical structures that are particularly expensive in terms of processing costs. The author presents an original hypothesis, proposing that dyslexia is related to a working memory inefficiency, affecting in particular the subject?s phonological skills and executive functions. The results of four experimental protocols, assessing dyslexic children?s working memory and their ability to interpret scalar implicatures, negative sentences and pronominal expressions, are presented and discussed. Read more...