Rise time perception and detection of syllable stress in adults with developmental dyslexia
Rise time perception and detection of syllable stress in adults with developmental dyslexia
Introduction
The perception of syllable stress has not been widely studied in developmental dyslexia, despite strong evidence for auditory rhythmic perceptual difficulties. Here we investigate the hypothesis that perception of sound rise time is related to the perception of syllable stress in adults with developmental dyslexia.
Methods
A same-different stress perception task was devised and delivered to a sample of 40 adults in two formats, one using pairs of identical 4-syllable words and one using pairs of two different 4-syllable words. Auditory perception of rise time, frequency and intensity, and phonological awareness, phonological memory and reading were also measured.
Results
We show that adults with dyslexia performed significantly more poorly in both versions of the stress perception task. Individual differences in the perception of rise time were linked to the accuracy of performance.
Conclusions
To our knowledge this is the first direct demonstration of syllable stress perception deficits in dyslexia. The accurate perception of intonational patterning and rhythm may be critical for the development of the phonological lexicon and consequently for the development of literacy. Even high-functioning compensated adults with dyslexia show impairments in speech processing.
59-73
Leong, Victoria
3273f8ab-d375-41a7-8e0f-74a19f726bb1
Hämäläinen, Jarmo
1ee80598-c107-458f-b97b-d5f7068e7a42
Soltész, Fruzsina
cbc12e4b-9d6f-4c24-8203-47ae2bd8f470
Goswami, Usha
d31da211-5a9b-4a09-af8d-fa96f19dbbad
January 2011
Leong, Victoria
3273f8ab-d375-41a7-8e0f-74a19f726bb1
Hämäläinen, Jarmo
1ee80598-c107-458f-b97b-d5f7068e7a42
Soltész, Fruzsina
cbc12e4b-9d6f-4c24-8203-47ae2bd8f470
Goswami, Usha
d31da211-5a9b-4a09-af8d-fa96f19dbbad
Leong, Victoria, Hämäläinen, Jarmo, Soltész, Fruzsina and Goswami, Usha
(2011)
Rise time perception and detection of syllable stress in adults with developmental dyslexia.
Journal of Memory and Language, 64 (1), .
(doi:10.1016/j.jml.2010.09.003).
Abstract
Introduction
The perception of syllable stress has not been widely studied in developmental dyslexia, despite strong evidence for auditory rhythmic perceptual difficulties. Here we investigate the hypothesis that perception of sound rise time is related to the perception of syllable stress in adults with developmental dyslexia.
Methods
A same-different stress perception task was devised and delivered to a sample of 40 adults in two formats, one using pairs of identical 4-syllable words and one using pairs of two different 4-syllable words. Auditory perception of rise time, frequency and intensity, and phonological awareness, phonological memory and reading were also measured.
Results
We show that adults with dyslexia performed significantly more poorly in both versions of the stress perception task. Individual differences in the perception of rise time were linked to the accuracy of performance.
Conclusions
To our knowledge this is the first direct demonstration of syllable stress perception deficits in dyslexia. The accurate perception of intonational patterning and rhythm may be critical for the development of the phonological lexicon and consequently for the development of literacy. Even high-functioning compensated adults with dyslexia show impairments in speech processing.
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More information
Published date: January 2011
Organisations:
Psychology
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 375339
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/375339
ISSN: 0749-596X
PURE UUID: c4b48766-2685-4f10-bd56-cccc00b29e6d
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Date deposited: 31 Mar 2015 16:00
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 19:24
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Contributors
Author:
Victoria Leong
Author:
Jarmo Hämäläinen
Author:
Fruzsina Soltész
Author:
Usha Goswami
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