Exploring the nature of the phonological deficit in dyslexia: are phonological representations impaired?
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Dickie, Catherine Elizabeth
Abstract
Developmental dyslexia is widely believed to be caused either mainly or in part by
an impairment of phonological representations. Although this hypothesis predicts
that individuals with dyslexia should show deficits in tasks which require the use of
implicit phonological knowledge, this has not yet been directly tested, as the
evidence cited in support of this hypothesis usually comes from metalinguistic tasks
which demand explicit awareness of phonological units. Additionally, since the
ability to perform metalinguistic tasks which involve phonological segments can be
enhanced by an individual’s competence in alphabetic literacy, the possibility
remains that phonological skills may have been inadequately isolated from the
influences of literacy acquisition in many cases.
The study reported in this thesis investigated both the representations and the
metalinguistic skills of a group of adults with a history of developmental dyslexia,
examining areas of phonology which do and do not have orthographic counterparts.
To isolate phonological skills from orthographic skills, the representations of
conventional segmental contrasts (e.g. /k/ vs /g/) were compared with the
representation of suprasegmental contrasts (as seen in minimal pairs such as ′toy
factory and toy ′factory), which have no orthographic counterpart. Basic
metalinguistic skills were tested by means of a phonological awareness task
targeting both segmental and suprasegmental units, and phonological manipulation
skills were tested using a Pig Latin task and a Spoonerism task, where participants
were required to manipulate both segmental and suprasegmental units (e.g.
extracting the segment /b/ from consonant clusters and the main stress from SWW
or WSW stress patterns).
The results showed that although the performance of the dyslexic group was
weaker than that of the control group when tasks required the manipulation of
either the segmental or suprasegmental components of words, no evidence was
found for a deficit in the tasks which drew on implicit representations or basic
metalinguistic skills. These findings suggest that the phonological deficit in dyslexia
may be restricted to the ability to manipulate phonological units rather than in the
representation of them per se.
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