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Journal Article

Citation

Hawelka S, Wimmer H. Vision Res. 2008; 48(6): 850-852.

Affiliation

Department of Psychology and Center of Neurocognitive Research, University of Salzburg, Hellbrunnerstr. 34, A-5020 Salzburg, Austria.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2008, Elsevier Publishing)

DOI

10.1016/j.visres.2007.11.003

PMID

18177914

PMCID

PMC2956911

Abstract

In two previous studies we assessed a difficulty of dyslexic readers with letter string processing by using variants of the partial report paradigm, e.g., Averbach and Coriell [Averbach, E., and Coriell, A. S. (1961). Short-term memory in vision. Bell Systems Technical Journal, 40, 309-328] which requires report of a letter name in response to a position cue. The poor dyslexic performance was interpreted as evidence for a visual-attentional deficit of dyslexic readers. In the present study, we avoided verbal report by using a task which only required the detection of predefined targets (letters or pseudoletters) in strings. On this purely visual task, the dyslexic readers did not differ from non-impaired readers. This finding speaks against a basic visual-attentional deficit; rather it suggests that the dyslexic deficit on partial report paradigms stems from a problem in establishing a string representation which includes position and name codes.



Language: en

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