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Autoren Steinbrink, Claudia; Klatte, Maria; Lachmann, Thomas  
Titel Phonological, temporal and spectral processing in vowel length discrimination is impaired in German primary school children with developmental dyslexia.  
URL https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ridd.2014.07.049  
URN, persistent 10.1016/j.ridd.2014.07.049  
Erscheinungsjahr 2014, Jg. 35, H. 11  
Seitenzahl S. 3034-3045  
Zeitschrift Research in developmental disabilities  
ISSN 0891-4222; 1873-3379  
Dokumenttyp Zeitschriftenaufsatz; gedruckt; online  
Sprache englisch  
Forschungsschwerpunkt Forschung zu Diagnostik und Intervention bei Entwicklungsstörungen schulischer Fertigkeiten  
Schlagwörter Dyslexie; Phonologie; Auditive Stimulation; Grundschule; Schüler; Schuljahr 03; Schuljahr 04; Vokal; Deutschland;  
Abstract It is still unclear whether phonological processing deficits are the underlying cause of developmental dyslexia, or rather a consequence of basic auditory processing impairments. To avoid methodological confounds, in the current study the same task and stimuli of comparable complexity were used to investigate both phonological and basic auditory (temporal and spectral) processing in dyslexia. German dyslexic children (Grades 3 and 4) were compared to age- and grade-matched controls in a vowel length discrimination task with three experimental conditions: In a phonological condition, natural vowels were used, differing both with respect to temporal and spectral information (in German, vowel length is phonemic, and vowel length differences are characterized by both temporal and spectral information). In a temporal condition, spectral information differentiating between the two vowels of a pair was eliminated, whereas in a spectral condition, temporal differences were removed. As performance measure, the sensitivity index d′ was computed. At the group level, dyslexic children’s performance was inferior to that of controls for phonological as well as temporal and spectral vowel length discrimination. At an individual level, nearly half of the dyslexic sample was characterized by deficits in all three conditions, but there were also some children showing no deficits at all. These results reveal on the one hand that phonological processing deficits in dyslexia may stem from impairments in processing temporal and spectral information in the speech signal. On the other hand they indicate, however, that not all dyslexic children might be characterized by phonological or auditory processing deficits. (Orig.).  
Förderkennzeichen 01GJ1003