Varieties of developmental dyslexia in Greek children

  • Georgia Z. Niolaki
  • , Aris R. Terzopoulos
  • , Jackie Masterson*
  • *Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

The current study aimed to investigate in a group of nine Greek children with dyslexia (mean age 9.9 years) whether the surface and phonological dyslexia subtypes could be identified. A simple regression was conducted using printed word naming latencies and nonword reading accuracy for 33 typically developing readers. Ninety per cent confidence intervals were established and dyslexic children with datapoints lying outside the confidence intervals were identified. Using this regression-based method three children with the characteristic of phonological dyslexia (poor nonword reading), two with surface dyslexia (slow word naming latencies) and four with a mixed profile (poor nonword reading accuracy and slow word naming latencies) were identified. The children were also assessed in spelling to dictation, phonological ability, rapid naming, visual memory and multi-character processing (letter report). Results revealed that the phonological dyslexia subtype children had difficulties in tasks of phonological ability, and the surface subtype children had difficulties in tasks of multi-character simultaneous processing ability. Dyslexic children with a mixed profile showed deficits in both phonological abilities and multi-character processing. In addition, one child with a mixed profile showed a rapid naming deficit and another showed a difficulty in visual memory for abstract designs. Overall the results confirm that the surface and phonological subtypes of developmental dyslexia can be found in Greek-speaking children. They also indicate that different subtypes are associated with different underlying disorders.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)230-256
Number of pages27
JournalWriting Systems Research
Volume6
Issue number2
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 3 Jul 2014

Keywords

  • Greek dyslexic children
  • Multi- charactersimultaneous processing
  • Phonological ability
  • Subtypes

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Language and Linguistics
  • Linguistics and Language

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