Independence of syntactic and phonological deficits in dyslexia: A study using the attraction error paradigm

Title
Independence of syntactic and phonological deficits in dyslexia: A study using the attraction error paradigm
Publication Date
2019-02
Author(s)
Anton-Mendez, Ines
( author )
OrcID: https://orcid.org/0000-0003-1237-8126
Email: iantonm2@une.edu.au
UNE Id une-id:iantonm2
Cuetos, Fernando
Suarez‐Coalla, Paz
Type of document
Journal Article
Language
en
Entity Type
Publication
Publisher
John Wiley & Sons Ltd
Place of publication
United Kingdom
DOI
10.1002/dys.1601
UNE publication id
une:1959.11/29616
Abstract
This paper addresses the question of whether dyslexic children suffer from syntactic deficits that are independent of limitations with phonological processing. We looked at subject‐verb agreement errors after sentence subjects containing a second noun (the attractor) known to be able to attract incorrect agreement (e.g., “the owner(s) of the house(s) is/are away”). In the general population, attraction errors are not straightforwardly dependent on the presence or absence of morphophonological plural markers but on their syntactic configuration. The same would be expected for dyslexic children if their syntactic problems are not phonological in nature. We also looked at the possible effect of system overload on syntactic processing by comparing auditory and written presentation of stimuli and stimuli with high and low frequency attractors. Dyslexic children produced more agreement errors than age‐matched controls, but their errors were distributed in the expected manner and did not align with the presence of morphophonological number markers in the subject overall. Furthermore, there was no effect of either presentation mode or attractor frequency on the number of agreement errors. Our results confirm the existence of syntactic difficulties in dyslexia and suggest that they are not due to a phonological deficit or to verbal working memory limitations.
Link
Citation
Dyslexia, 25(1), p. 38-56
ISSN
1076-9242
1099-0909
Pubmed ID
30407678
Start page
38
End page
56

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