15 research outputs found
Speech perception abilities of adults with dyslexia: is there any evidence for a true deficit?
PURPOSE: This study investigated whether adults with dyslexia show evidence of a consistent speech perception deficit by testing phoneme categorization and word perception in noise. METHOD: Seventeen adults with dyslexia and 20 average readers underwent a test battery including standardized reading, language and phonological awareness tests, and tests of speech perception. Categorization of a pea/bee voicing contrast was evaluated using adaptive identification and discrimination tasks, presented in quiet and in noise, and a fixed-step discrimination task. Two further tests of word perception in noise were presented. RESULTS: There were no significant group differences for categorization in quiet or noise, across- and within-category discrimination as measured adaptively, or word perception, but average readers showed better across- and within-category discrimination in the fixed-step discrimination task. Individuals did not show consistent poor performance across related tasks. CONCLUSIONS: The small number of group differences, and lack of consistent poor individual performance, suggests weak support for a speech perception deficit in dyslexia. It seems likely that at least some poor performances are attributable to nonsensory factors like attention. It may also be that some individuals with dyslexia have speech perceptual acuity that is at the lower end of the normal range and exacerbated by nonsensory factors
The effect of talker and intonation variability on speech perception in noise in children with dyslexia.
In this study, the authors aimed to determine whether children with dyslexia (hereafter referred to as "DYS children") are more affected than children with average reading ability (hereafter referred to as "AR children") by talker and intonation variability when perceiving speech in noise
Heather van der Lely and developmental language disorders: Introduction to the special issue
The Effect of Talker and Intonation Variability on Speech Perception in Noise in Children With Dyslexia
Speech Perception Abilities of Adults With Dyslexia: Is There Any Evidence for a True Deficit?
Assessing speech perception in children with language difficulties: Effects of background noise and phonetic contrast
Investigating Speech Perception in Children With Dyslexia: Is There Evidence of a Consistent Deficit in Individuals?
The claim that speech perception abilities are impaired in dyslexia was investigated in a group of 62 children with dyslexia and 51 average readers matched in age