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  4. Phonological or procedural dyslexia: specific deficit of complex grapheme-to-phoneme conversion
 
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Phonological or procedural dyslexia: specific deficit of complex grapheme-to-phoneme conversion

Auteur(s)
Macoir, Joel
Fossard, Marion 
Institut des sciences logopédiques 
Saint Pierre, Marie Catherine
Auclair-Ouellet, Noemie
Date de parution
2012-5-2
In
Journal of Neurolinguistics
Vol.
3
No
25
De la page
163
A la page
177
Mots-clés
  • reading
  • phonological dyslexia
  • reading

  • phonological dyslexia...

Résumé
Phonological dyslexia is a written language disorder characterized by poor reading of nonwords when compared with relatively preserved ability in reading real words. There are two main theoretical proposals to explain this deficit: disruption of phonological processing or disruption to the non lexical reading route affecting the grapheme-to-phoneme conversion rules (GPC). In this study, we report a single-case study of a mild aphasic patient with acquired phonological dyslexia. His ability was unimpaired for reading words as well as in a wide range of tasks requiring the activation and explicit manipulation of phonological representations. He could also read every non word with consistent GPC rules, whilst he was impaired for those with context sensitive conversion rules, a pattern of performance never reported before. The implications of these results for theoretical explanations of phonological dyslexia are discussed, as well as the contribution of the patient's concomitant executive deficits to his performance in reading.
Identifiants
https://libra.unine.ch/handle/123456789/16803
_
10.1016/j.jneuroling.2011.11.002
Type de publication
journal article
Dossier(s) à télécharger
 main article: 1-s2.0-S0911604411000923-main.pdf (206.57 KB)
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