Vukovic Rose K, Siegel Linda S
Department of Educational Psychology, University of British Columbia, Vancouver.
J Learn Disabil. 2006 Jan-Feb;39(1):25-47. doi: 10.1177/00222194060390010401.
The double-deficit hypothesis of developmental dyslexia proposes that deficits in phonological processing and naming speed represent independent sources of dysfunction in dyslexia. The present article is a review of the evidence for the double-deficit hypothesis, including a discussion of recent findings related to the hypothesis. Studies in this area have been characterized by variability in methodology--how dyslexia is defined and identified, and how dyslexia subtypes are classified. Such variability sets limitations on the extent to which conclusions may be drawn with respect to the double-deficit hypothesis. Furthermore, the literature is complicated by the persistent finding that measures of phonological processing and naming speed are significantly correlated, resulting in a statistical artifact that makes it difficult to disentangle the influence of naming speed from that of phonological processing. Longitudinal and intervention studies of the double-deficit hypothesis are needed to accumulate evidence that investigates a naming speed deficit that is independent of a phonological deficit for readers with dyslexia. The existing evidence does not support a persistent core deficit in naming speed for readers with dyslexia.
发展性阅读障碍的双重缺陷假说提出,语音加工和命名速度缺陷是阅读障碍中功能障碍的独立来源。本文是对双重缺陷假说证据的综述,包括对与该假说相关的最新研究结果的讨论。该领域的研究特点是方法存在差异——阅读障碍如何定义和识别,以及阅读障碍亚型如何分类。这种差异限制了就双重缺陷假说得出结论的程度。此外,文献因一个持续的发现而变得复杂,即语音加工和命名速度的测量显著相关,这导致了一种统计假象,使得难以区分命名速度和语音加工的影响。需要对双重缺陷假说进行纵向和干预研究,以积累证据,调查阅读障碍读者中独立于语音缺陷的命名速度缺陷。现有证据不支持阅读障碍读者存在持续的核心命名速度缺陷。