Cavalli – Duncan – 2017

Authors: Eddy Cavalli, Lynne G. Duncan, Carsten Elbro, Abdessadek El Ahmadi, Pascale Colé.

Article: Phonemic—Morphemic dissociation in university students with dyslexia: an index of reading compensation?.

Publication: Annals of Dyslexia Vol 67, Issue 1, pp 63-84 2017 | DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s11881-016-0138-y

Some dyslexic adults successfully manage to study at university level, although very little is currently known about how they achieve this. The present study investigated at both the individual and group levels, whether the development of another oral language skill, namely, morphological knowledge, can be preserved and dissociated from the development of phonological knowledge. Reading, phonological, and morphological abilities were measured in 20 dyslexic and 20 non-dyslexic university students. The results confirmed the persistence of deficits in phonological but not morphological abilities, thereby revealing a dissociation in the development of these two skills. Moreover, the magnitude of the dissociation correlated with reading level. The outcome supports the claim that university students with dyslexia may compensate for phonological weaknesses by drawing on morphological knowledge in reading.

Tagged as: altbrain, morphological processing, and wordmeaning

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