Université Clermont Auvergne, 34, Avenue Carnot, TSA 60401, 63001, Clermont-Ferrand, France.
Laboratoire de Psychologie Sociale Et Cognitive (LAPSCO), CNRS UMR 6024, 17, Rue Paul Collomp, 63037, Clermont-Ferrand, France.
Ann Dyslexia. 2024 Jul;74(2):244-270. doi: 10.1007/s11881-024-00302-1. Epub 2024 Feb 17.
Learning to read is a middle-distance race for children worldwide. Most of them succeed in this acquisition with "normal" difficulties that ensue from the progressive (re)structuring of the phonological and orthographic systems. Evidence accumulated on reading difficulties in children with developmental dyslexia (DYS children, henceforth) shows a pervasive phonological deficit. However, the phonological deficit may not be due to degraded phonological representations but rather due to impaired access to them. This study focused on how and to what extent phonological syllables, which are essential reading units in French, were accessible to DYS children to segment and access words. We tested the assumption that DYS children did not strictly have pervasive degraded phonological representations but also have impaired access to phonological and orthographic representations. We administered a visually adapted word-spotting paradigm, engaging both sublexical processing and lexical access, with French native-speaking DYS children (N = 25; M = 121.6, SD = 3.0) compared with chronological age-matched peers (N = 25; M = 121.8, SD = 2.7; CA peers henceforth) and reading level-matched peers (N = 25; M = 94.0, SD = 4.6; RL peers henceforth). Although DYS children were slower and less accurate than CA and RL peers, we found that they used phonological syllables to access and segment words. However, they exhibit neither the classical inhibitory syllable frequency effect nor the lexical frequency effect, which is generally observed in typically developing children. Surprisingly, DYS children did not show strictly degraded phonological representations because they demonstrated phonological syllable-based segmentation abilities, particularly with high-frequency syllables. Their difficulties are rather interpreted in terms of impaired access to orthographic and phonological representations, which could be a direct effect of difficulties in generalizing and consolidating low-frequency syllables. We discuss these results regarding reading acquisition and the specificities of the French linguistic system.
儿童学习阅读是一场全球范围的中距离赛跑。他们大多数人都能成功地完成这一任务,只是在逐渐(重新)构建语音和正字法系统的过程中会遇到一些“正常”的困难。对阅读障碍儿童(简称 DYS 儿童)阅读困难的证据积累表明,他们普遍存在语音缺陷。然而,这种语音缺陷可能不是由于语音表征的退化,而是由于获取语音表征的能力受损。本研究关注的是,在法语中作为基本阅读单位的语音音节,DYS 儿童在多大程度上可以用来对单词进行切分和获取。我们假设 DYS 儿童不仅严格存在普遍退化的语音表征,而且在获取语音和正字法表征方面也存在障碍。我们用一种视觉上适应的单词定位范式来测试这一假设,该范式既涉及到次词汇处理,也涉及到词汇获取,研究对象是法语母语的 DYS 儿童(N=25;M=121.6,SD=3.0),与年龄匹配的对照组儿童(N=25;M=121.8,SD=2.7;CA 对照组)和阅读水平匹配的对照组儿童(N=25;M=94.0,SD=4.6;RL 对照组)进行比较。尽管 DYS 儿童的反应速度比 CA 和 RL 对照组慢,准确率也较低,但我们发现他们使用语音音节来获取和切分单词。然而,他们既没有表现出经典的抑制音节频率效应,也没有表现出词汇频率效应,而这在典型发育的儿童中是普遍存在的。令人惊讶的是,DYS 儿童并没有表现出严格退化的语音表征,因为他们表现出基于语音音节的切分能力,尤其是在高频音节上。他们的困难更多地可以被解释为对正字法和语音表征的获取能力受损,这可能是由于难以概括和巩固低频音节的直接影响。我们将根据阅读习得和法语语言系统的特殊性来讨论这些结果。