Johnston Richard, Pitchford Nicola J, Roach Neil W, Ledgeway Timothy
School of Psychology, University of Nottingham, Nottingham, UK.
School of Psychology, University of Nottingham, Nottingham, UK.
Brain Cogn. 2016 Oct;108:20-31. doi: 10.1016/j.bandc.2016.07.004. Epub 2016 Jul 16.
Individuals with dyslexia are purported to have a selective dorsal stream impairment that manifests as a deficit in perceiving visual global motion relative to global form. However, the underlying nature of the visual deficit in readers with dyslexia remains unclear. It may be indicative of a difficulty with motion detection, temporal processing, or any task that necessitates integration of local visual information across multiple dimensions (i.e. both across space and over time). To disentangle these possibilities we administered four diagnostic global motion and global form tasks to a large sample of adult readers (N=106) to characterise their perceptual abilities. Two sets of analyses were conducted. First, to investigate if general reading ability is associated with performance on the visual tasks across the entire sample, a composite reading score was calculated and entered into a series of continuous regression analyses. Next, to investigate if the performance of readers with dyslexia differs from that of good readers on the visual tasks we identified a group of forty-three individuals for whom phonological decoding was specifically impaired, consistent with the dyslexic profile, and compared their performance with that of good readers who did not exhibit a phonemic deficit. Both analyses yielded a similar pattern of results. Consistent with previous research, coherence thresholds of poor readers were elevated on a random-dot global motion task and a spatially one-dimensional (1-D) global motion task, but no difference was found on a static global form task. However, our results extend those of previous studies by demonstrating that poor readers exhibited impaired performance on a temporally-defined global form task, a finding that is difficult to reconcile with the dorsal stream vulnerability hypothesis. This suggests that the visual deficit in developmental dyslexia does not reflect an impairment detecting motion per se. It is better characterised as a difficulty processing temporal information, which is exacerbated when local visual cues have to be integrated across multiple (>2) dimensions.
据说患有阅读障碍的个体存在选择性背侧流损伤,表现为相对于整体形状而言,在感知视觉整体运动方面存在缺陷。然而,阅读障碍读者视觉缺陷的潜在本质仍不清楚。这可能表明在运动检测、时间处理或任何需要跨多个维度(即跨空间和时间)整合局部视觉信息的任务方面存在困难。为了厘清这些可能性,我们对一大群成年读者(N = 106)进行了四项诊断性整体运动和整体形状任务,以描述他们的感知能力。我们进行了两组分析。首先,为了研究一般阅读能力是否与整个样本在视觉任务上的表现相关,计算了一个综合阅读分数,并将其纳入一系列连续回归分析中。其次,为了研究阅读障碍读者在视觉任务上的表现是否与优秀读者不同,我们确定了一组四十三名个体,他们的语音解码能力明显受损,符合阅读障碍的特征,并将他们的表现与未表现出音素缺陷的优秀读者进行了比较。两项分析都得出了类似的结果模式。与先前的研究一致,在随机点整体运动任务和空间一维(1-D)整体运动任务上,阅读能力差的读者的连贯性阈值升高,但在静态整体形状任务上未发现差异。然而,我们的结果扩展了先前研究的结果,表明阅读能力差的读者在时间定义的整体形状任务上表现受损,这一发现难以与背侧流易损性假说相协调。这表明发育性阅读障碍中的视觉缺陷并不反映本身检测运动的损伤。它更好地被描述为处理时间信息的困难,当局部视觉线索必须跨多个(>2)维度整合时,这种困难会加剧。