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LSHSS-VOIA-18-0138alt_SuppS1.pdf (107.05 kB)

Word learning differences (Alt et al., 2019)

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journal contribution
posted on 2019-10-10, 22:14 authored by Mary Alt, Shelley Gray, Tiffany P. Hogan, Nora Schlesinger, Nelson Cowan
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.

Supplemental Material S1. Details of the Bayesian repeated measures ANCOVA with nonverbal intelligence as the covariate. These data allow readers to compare outcomes when nonverbal intelligence is included as a covariate.

Alt, M., Gray, S., Hogan, T. P., Schlesinger, N., & Cowan, N. (2019). Spoken word learning differences among children with dyslexia, concomitant dyslexia and developmental language disorder, and typical development. Language, Speech, and Hearing Services in Schools, 50, 540–561. https://doi.org/10.1044/2019_LSHSS-VOIA-18-0138

Publisher Note: This article is part of the Forum: Vocabulary Across the School Grades.

Funding

This work was supported by funding from National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders Grant R01 DC010784 (PI: Shelley Gray).

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