ABSTRACT
We report the results of three tasks of two-dimensional pictures, letters and symbols mental rotation (MR) among 9–11 years aged Arabic readers with dyslexia, in order to examine a potential stimulus type effect on MR ability in terms of accuracy and speed. Results showed that readers with dyslexia (n = 32) performed significantly lower and were slower than typical readers (n = 44) in the three MR tasks. Furthermore, ‘group’ and ‘type of stimuli’ effects were obtained for accuracy and speed of MR implementation, indicating impaired visual spatial orientation processing in children with dyslexia. Furthermore, repeated measures of ANOVA showed that letter MR is significantly slower than pictures and symbols in dyslexic group but no difference in terms of accuracy. These results are interpreted as support for the notion of linguistic based mental rotation impairment in developmental dyslexia, without being restricted to orthographic material.
Acknowledgements
Many thanks are due to the children who participated in this study as well as their parents and teachers for their kind cooperation and helpful assistance.
Disclosure statement
No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.