Visual attention in adults with developmental dyslexia: evidence from manual reaction time and saccade latency

J Judge, M Caravolas, PC Knox - Cognitive Neuropsychology, 2007 - Taylor & Francis
J Judge, M Caravolas, PC Knox
Cognitive Neuropsychology, 2007Taylor & Francis
Two studies were conducted to investigate visual attention deficits in dyslexia. In Experiment
1, adults with dyslexia and age-and IQ-matched controls completed a simple cueing task;
participants responded to briefly presented (20 ms) eccentric targets (3°, 6°, or 9°) with a key
press. In Experiment 2, the same participants completed a saccade version of the task, and
saccade amplitude, accuracy, and latency were measured. The results revealed comparable
performance between the groups on the manual reaction time task. The groups also …
Two studies were conducted to investigate visual attention deficits in dyslexia. In Experiment 1, adults with dyslexia and age- and IQ-matched controls completed a simple cueing task; participants responded to briefly presented (20 ms) eccentric targets (3°, 6°, or 9°) with a key press. In Experiment 2, the same participants completed a saccade version of the task, and saccade amplitude, accuracy, and latency were measured. The results revealed comparable performance between the groups on the manual reaction time task. The groups also performed similarly in saccade accuracy and latency. Moreover, neither group showed a visual field asymmetry in their performance, with the exception that adults with dyslexia showed longer saccade latency for 9° targets presented to their left visual field than did controls. However, on the latter measure, the majority (78%) of those with dyslexia performed within the range of the control group. Correlational analyses revealed associations between reading and phoneme awareness in both groups, but phoneme awareness was not associated with visual attention in adult dyslexics. Together, the results are not compatible with a visual attention deficit in adult dyslexia, while they provide support for the phonological deficit hypothesis.
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