2021
DOI: 10.1007/s11881-021-00231-3
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Facial speech processing in children with and without dyslexia

Abstract: What role does the presence of facial speech play for children with dyslexia? Current literature proposes two distinctive claims. One claim states that children with dyslexia make less use of visual information from the mouth during speech processing due to a deficit in recruitment of audiovisual areas. An opposing claim suggests that children with dyslexia are in fact reliant on such information in order to compensate for auditory/phonological impairments. The current paper aims at directly testing these cont… Show more

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Cited by 6 publications
(5 citation statements)
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References 76 publications
(103 reference statements)
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“…Given that the dyslexic readers in Baart et al (2012), Keetels et al (2018) and the current study were all university students capable of performing at an academic level, it is conceivable that their dyslexia symptoms were also relatively mild (although we have no access to their diagnosis). If so, the fact that they relied quite heavily on lip-read information in response to the challenging listening conditions aligns with the work by Galazka et al (2021). Van Laarhoven et al (2018) also provided university students (from the same population as in the current study) with a challenging listening environment by presenting speech in background noise.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 77%
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“…Given that the dyslexic readers in Baart et al (2012), Keetels et al (2018) and the current study were all university students capable of performing at an academic level, it is conceivable that their dyslexia symptoms were also relatively mild (although we have no access to their diagnosis). If so, the fact that they relied quite heavily on lip-read information in response to the challenging listening conditions aligns with the work by Galazka et al (2021). Van Laarhoven et al (2018) also provided university students (from the same population as in the current study) with a challenging listening environment by presenting speech in background noise.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 77%
“…This was also observed when the visual signal comprised a mosaic version of the (inverted) talking face in which detailed lip-read information was lost, but the visual gain induced by this low-frequency visual information was smaller for participants with poorer auditory-processing capacity. Thus, under challenging listening conditions, participants with less severe reading problems look more at the mouth (Galazka et al, 2021) and participants with less severe auditory-processing issues show more visual gain from low-level dynamic visual cues (Megnin-Viggars and Goswami, 2013). Given that the dyslexic readers in Baart et al (2012), Keetels et al (2018) and the current study were all university students capable of performing at an academic level, it is conceivable that their dyslexia symptoms were also relatively mild (although we have no access to their diagnosis).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 80%
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“…To date, a variety of dyslexia‐related pathological deficits have been identified, such as impaired speech processing, [ 58 ] situs inversus, [ 59 ] short‐term memory impairment, [ 13 ] and difficulties with rapid auditory processing. [ 60 ] In addition, dyslexia patients sometimes suffer from hearing loss, but the mechanism of DRHL is unclear.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Articulatory gestures and speech perception. Researchers have found directly teaching students speech gestures supports students' phonemic awareness and letter-sound knowledge, particularly for students with reading disabilities or at risk for reading difficulty (Boyer & Ehri, 2011;Fälth et al, 2017;Galazka et al, 2021). Therefore, instruction emphasizing articulatory gestures-what the mouth looks like during sound production-can support young children and students with dyslexia in reading and spelling acquisition.…”
Section: Why Include Mouth Pictures?mentioning
confidence: 99%