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Original Articles

Combined auditory and articulatory training improves phonological deficit in children with dyslexia

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Pages 402-429 | Received 01 Sep 2006, Published online: 25 Jun 2008
 

Abstract

A group of 19 children with dyslexia aged 7 years 2 months to 10 years 9 months were selected from a clinical sample and tested using a large neuropsychological battery in order to specify the severity and subtype of dyslexia as well as the presence of comorbid conditions. Thereafter, they received a standardised training of 6 weeks of daily auditory exercises aimed at reinforcing explicit and implicit phonological awareness. Ten participants also received specific training of the sensory-motor aspects of articulatory production of individual phonemes during the first 3 weeks of auditory training, whereas the remaining received the same specific training during the last 3 weeks of auditory training. Repetition, phonological awareness, reading and spelling were assessed before the first session, between the two sessions and after the second session. Results confirm the overall efficiency of intensive phonological training, even with exclusively auditory material. The main outcome of this study is a significant improvement of phonology and non-word reading specifically during the periods where the two methods were associated, suggesting a significant contribution of articulatory training to the observed improvement. Finally performance to a motor tapping task proved to be one of the best predictors of training efficiency while comorbid co-ordination or attention deficit did not interfere. Results are interpreted with reference to current theories about mechanisms underlying dyslexia.

This work was made possible thanks to ACI Cognitique 1999–2000 funding from the French Ministry of Scientific Research and a PHRC-APHM 2001 grant. Barbara Joly-Pottuz's doctoral thesis was partly supported by ADREN, RESODYS and APHM. The authors wish to thank three reviewers for their valuable comments.

Notes

1Note that, in the French health system, speech-language therapists are traditionally in charge of diagnosis and remediation of reading/spelling pathologies, which is not the case in other countries.

2Note that progression between E1–E2 and E2–E3 may be significantly different even though the slopes do not seem to be different.

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