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Journal ArticleDOI

Rise Time and Formant Transition Duration in the Discrimination of Speech Sounds: The Ba-Wa Distinction in Developmental Dyslexia.

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TLDR
It is shown that children with dyslexia have excellent phonetic discrimination based on formant transition duration, but poor phoneticdiscrimination based on envelope cues, which explains why phonetic Discrimination may be allophonic in developmental Dyslexia and suggest new avenues for the remediation of developmental dyslexi.
Abstract
Across languages, children with developmental dyslexia have a specific difficulty with the neural representation of the sound structure (phonological structure) of speech. One likely cause of their difficulties with phonology is a perceptual difficulty in auditory temporal processing (Tallal, 1980). Tallal (1980) proposed that basic auditory processing of brief, rapidly successive acoustic changes is compromised in dyslexia, thereby affecting phonetic discrimination (e.g. discriminating /b/ from /d/) via impaired discrimination of formant transitions (rapid acoustic changes in frequency and intensity). However, an alternative auditory temporal hypothesis is that the basic auditory processing of the slower amplitude modulation cues in speech is compromised (Goswami et al., 2002). Here, we contrast children's perception of a synthetic speech contrast (ba/wa) when it is based on the speed of the rate of change of frequency information (formant transition duration) versus the speed of the rate of change of amplitude modulation (rise time). We show that children with dyslexia have excellent phonetic discrimination based on formant transition duration, but poor phonetic discrimination based on envelope cues. The results explain why phonetic discrimination may be allophonic in developmental dyslexia (Serniclaes et al., 2004), and suggest new avenues for the remediation of developmental dyslexia.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

A temporal sampling framework for developmental dyslexia.

TL;DR: It is argued that an oscillatory 'temporal sampling' framework enables diverse data from developmental dyslexia to be drawn into an integrated theoretical framework, offering opportunities for integrating a diverse and confusing experimental literature.
Journal ArticleDOI

Sensory theories of developmental dyslexia: three challenges for research.

TL;DR: It is suggested that longitudinal studies of sensory processing, beginning in infancy, are required to successfully identify the neural basis of developmental dyslexia and have a powerful impact on remediation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Music, rhythm, rise time perception and developmental dyslexia: perception of musical meter predicts reading and phonology.

TL;DR: It is shown that individual differences in the perception of amplitude envelope rise time are linked to musical meetrical sensitivity, and that musical metrical sensitivity predicts PA and reading development, accounting for over 60% of variance in reading along with age and I.Q.
Journal ArticleDOI

Effectiveness of treatment approaches for children and adolescents with reading disabilities: a meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials.

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that severe reading and spelling difficulties can be ameliorated with appropriate treatment and research should intensify the application of blinded randomized controlled trials.
Journal ArticleDOI

A Rhythmic Musical Intervention for Poor Readers: A Comparison of Efficacy With a Letter-Based Intervention

TL;DR: The authors compared the effects of a musical intervention for poor readers with a software intervention of known efficacy based on rhyme training and phoneme-grapheme learning, and found that the two interventions had similar benefits for literacy, with large effect sizes.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Transformed Up‐Down Methods in Psychoacoustics

TL;DR: A broad class of up‐down methods used in psychoacoustics with due emphasis on the related problems of parameter estimation and the efficient placing of observations is described, including examples where conventional techniques are inapplicable.
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Speech recognition with primarily temporal cues.

TL;DR: Nearly perfect speech recognition was observed under conditions of greatly reduced spectral information; the presentation of a dynamic temporal pattern in only a few broad spectral regions is sufficient for the recognition of speech.
Journal ArticleDOI

Reading acquisition, developmental dyslexia, and skilled reading across languages: a psycholinguistic grain size theory.

TL;DR: The authors develop a novel theoretical framework to explain cross-language data, which they label a psycholinguistic grain size theory of reading and its development.
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Auditory temporal perception, phonics, and reading disabilities in children ☆

TL;DR: The hypothesis that some reading impairments are related to low-level auditory perceptual dysfunction that affects the ability to learn to use phonics skills adequately is discussed.
Journal ArticleDOI

To see but not to read; the magnocellular theory of dyslexia

TL;DR: Anatomical, electrophysiological, psychophysical and brain-imaging studies have contributed to elucidating the functional organization of visual confusions, finding that dyslexics may be unable to process fast incoming sensory information adequately in any domain.
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