Literature DB >> 12208010

Executive functioning in adults and children with developmental dyslexia.

Mark Brosnan1, James Demetre, Stephen Hamill, Kate Robson, Haidee Shepherd, Gerard Cody.   

Abstract

The performance of developmentally dyslexic children and adults was studied upon a range of tasks that involved executive functioning. Both adult and child samples of dyslexics were found to under-perform on the group-embedded figures test. This test required the identification of constituent parts from within complex visual arrays, with good performance necessitating the inhibition of the processing of the surrounding context. A general deficit on visual-spatial tasks was eliminated as an explanation as dyslexics performed normally upon a range of other non-verbal assessments. The dyslexics consistently demonstrated a deficit in digit span tasks, a decrement that was increased with distractors, again suggesting difficulties in inhibiting the processing of the surrounding context. A deficit was also identified upon a verbal fluency task without a deficit in vocabulary level. Additionally, a specific deficit in the recollection of the temporal order of the presentation of items was in evidence, without a deficit in the recognition of the items themselves. The findings taken as a whole suggest that dyslexic individuals show deficiencies in executive functions relating to inhibition of distractors and to sequencing of events, a set of tasks associated with left prefrontal cortex functioning in the acquired neuropsychology literature.

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Year:  2002        PMID: 12208010     DOI: 10.1016/s0028-3932(02)00046-5

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Neuropsychologia        ISSN: 0028-3932            Impact factor:   3.139


  42 in total

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2.  Poor Stroop performances in 15-year-old dyslexic teenagers.

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5.  Surface area accounts for the relation of gray matter volume to reading-related skills and history of dyslexia.

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7.  Individual differences in categorical perception of speech: Cue weighting and executive function.

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8.  Altered Functional Connectivity of the Executive Functions Network During a Stroop Task in Children with Reading Difficulties.

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10.  Executive function in very preterm children at early school age.

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