Do visual attentional factors contribute to phonological ability? Studies in adult dyslexia

A case study approach was taken to examine the role of visual attention and auditory memory processes in eight adults with dyslexia, all of whom demonstrated phonological difficulties. The participants were administered a battery of neuropsychological tests and participated in an attentional cueing...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Buchholz, J, Aimola Davies, A
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: Routledge 2007
_version_ 1826317573947392000
author Buchholz, J
Aimola Davies, A
author_facet Buchholz, J
Aimola Davies, A
author_sort Buchholz, J
collection OXFORD
description A case study approach was taken to examine the role of visual attention and auditory memory processes in eight adults with dyslexia, all of whom demonstrated phonological difficulties. The participants were administered a battery of neuropsychological tests and participated in an attentional cueing experiment. Individual data revealed that, although one adult with dyslexia showed overt visual attention deficits on a visual search task, and five showed auditory working memory deficits, the difficulty that all of the adults with dyslexia had in common was with covert shifts of attention toward and away from fixation. These results indicate that deficits in overt visual attentional processing and working memory can be present with dyslexia, but neither is a necessary requirement. Overall, the results suggest that covert visual attention makes a significant contribution to phonological ability, which thus has implications for reading ability.
first_indexed 2024-03-07T07:07:07Z
format Journal article
id oxford-uuid:00bc8a7a-3d9d-4d83-9e1f-7cfa1ec546f5
institution University of Oxford
language English
last_indexed 2025-03-11T16:56:03Z
publishDate 2007
publisher Routledge
record_format dspace
spelling oxford-uuid:00bc8a7a-3d9d-4d83-9e1f-7cfa1ec546f52025-02-27T11:07:15ZDo visual attentional factors contribute to phonological ability? Studies in adult dyslexiaJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:00bc8a7a-3d9d-4d83-9e1f-7cfa1ec546f5EnglishSymplectic Elements at OxfordRoutledge2007Buchholz, JAimola Davies, AA case study approach was taken to examine the role of visual attention and auditory memory processes in eight adults with dyslexia, all of whom demonstrated phonological difficulties. The participants were administered a battery of neuropsychological tests and participated in an attentional cueing experiment. Individual data revealed that, although one adult with dyslexia showed overt visual attention deficits on a visual search task, and five showed auditory working memory deficits, the difficulty that all of the adults with dyslexia had in common was with covert shifts of attention toward and away from fixation. These results indicate that deficits in overt visual attentional processing and working memory can be present with dyslexia, but neither is a necessary requirement. Overall, the results suggest that covert visual attention makes a significant contribution to phonological ability, which thus has implications for reading ability.
spellingShingle Buchholz, J
Aimola Davies, A
Do visual attentional factors contribute to phonological ability? Studies in adult dyslexia
title Do visual attentional factors contribute to phonological ability? Studies in adult dyslexia
title_full Do visual attentional factors contribute to phonological ability? Studies in adult dyslexia
title_fullStr Do visual attentional factors contribute to phonological ability? Studies in adult dyslexia
title_full_unstemmed Do visual attentional factors contribute to phonological ability? Studies in adult dyslexia
title_short Do visual attentional factors contribute to phonological ability? Studies in adult dyslexia
title_sort do visual attentional factors contribute to phonological ability studies in adult dyslexia
work_keys_str_mv AT buchholzj dovisualattentionalfactorscontributetophonologicalabilitystudiesinadultdyslexia
AT aimoladaviesa dovisualattentionalfactorscontributetophonologicalabilitystudiesinadultdyslexia