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Crossmodal Temporal Order and Processing Acuity in...
Journal article

Crossmodal Temporal Order and Processing Acuity in Developmentally Dyslexic Young Adults

Abstract

We investigated crossmodal temporal performance in processing rapid sequential nonlinguistic events in developmentally dyslexic young adults (ages 20-36 years) and an age- and IQ-matched control group in audiotactile, visuotactile, and audiovisual combinations. Two methods were used for estimating 84% correct temporal acuity thresholds: temporal order judgment (TOJ) and temporal processing acuity (TPA). TPA requires phase difference detection: the judgment of simultaneity/nonsimultaneity of brief stimuli in two parallel, spatially separate triplets. The dyslexic readers' average temporal performance was somewhat poorer in all six comparisons; in audiovisual comparisons the group differences were not statistically significant, however. A principal component analysis indicated that temporal acuity and phonological awareness are related in dyslexic readers. The impairment of temporal input processing seems to be a general correlative feature of dyslexia in children and adults, but the overlap in performance between dyslexic and normal readers suggests that it is not a sufficient reason for developmental reading difficulties.

Authors

Laasonen M; Service E; Virsu V

Journal

Brain and Language, Vol. 80, No. 3, pp. 340–354

Publisher

Elsevier

Publication Date

January 1, 2002

DOI

10.1006/brln.2001.2593

ISSN

0093-934X

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