2019
DOI: 10.48550/arxiv.1903.06274
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DysLexML: Screening Tool for Dyslexia Using Machine Learning

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Cited by 10 publications
(18 citation statements)
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“…The text was written in the subjects' native language, Serbian, which has a perfect matching between letters and phonemes. Considering dyslexia detection in such languages (the ones with a shallow orthographic system) is often quite difficult; an accuracy of 94% achieved on the balanced dataset used in this paper (F1 score 0.93 and AUROC 0.96) (Table 2) shows a promising result that is comparable to the ones achieved in the literature [29,30,32,33,[35][36][37][39][40][41] which were performed on languages with deeper orthographic systems. As the Serbian language has a shallow orthographic system, making dyslexia harder to diagnose, we consider the observed subject pool relevant for the performed research purposes for a language such as Serbian.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 68%
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“…The text was written in the subjects' native language, Serbian, which has a perfect matching between letters and phonemes. Considering dyslexia detection in such languages (the ones with a shallow orthographic system) is often quite difficult; an accuracy of 94% achieved on the balanced dataset used in this paper (F1 score 0.93 and AUROC 0.96) (Table 2) shows a promising result that is comparable to the ones achieved in the literature [29,30,32,33,[35][36][37][39][40][41] which were performed on languages with deeper orthographic systems. As the Serbian language has a shallow orthographic system, making dyslexia harder to diagnose, we consider the observed subject pool relevant for the performed research purposes for a language such as Serbian.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 68%
“…As the Serbian language has a shallow orthographic system, making dyslexia harder to diagnose, we consider the observed subject pool relevant for the performed research purposes for a language such as Serbian. Although the number of participants used in this study is lower than the subject groups found in the literature [28,29,36,39,40], the number of total used trials (378 trials, explained in Section 3.1) provided enough data for the performed type of machine learning analysis.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…In a previous study conducted by the lab, it was found that dyslexics had more difficulty with binocular coordination while reading a more complex, nonsense text than when they were reading an easier text that carried a narrative. Indeed, another study has demonstrated that predictive power of determining dyslexia was stronger while studying more difficult texts [ 35 ]. We therefore concluded that dyslexics’ oculomotor profiles were destabilized while reading more complex nonsense texts.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Asvestopoulou et al [ 3 ] reported evidence for the predictive capacity of eye movement abnormalities during reading texts and the dependency of the predictive power on the type of reading text. In a more recent study, El Hmimdi et al [ 4 ] investigated predicting dyslexia using a set of linear and nonlinear classifiers, by considering all eye movement features (latency, peak and average velocity, duration, amplitude, disconjugacy during post-saccadic drifts or of the saccade itself, etc.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%