Can a simple, short-term memory task help to screen dyslexia?

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Author
Perham, Nick
Howell, Toni
Watt, Andrew
Date
2019-12-14Acceptance date
2019-10-31
Type
Article
Publisher
Springer
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Funding to support students with dyslexia in post-compulsory education is under pressure and more efficient assessments may
offset some of this shortfall. We tested potential tasks for screening dyslexia: recall of adjective-noun, compared to noun adjective, pairings (syntax) and recall of high versus low frequency letter pairings (bigrams). Students who reported themselves
as dyslexic failed to show a normal syntax effect (greater recall of adjective-noun compared to noun-adjective pairings) and no
significant difference in recall between the two types of bigrams whereas students who were not dyslexic showed the syntax
effect and a bias towards recalling high frequency bigrams. Findings are consistent with recent explanations of dyslexia suggesting that those affected find it difficult to learn and utilise sequential long-term order information (Szmalec et al. Journal of
Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory & Cognition, 37(5) ,1270-1279, 2011). Further, ROC curve analyses revealed both
tasks showed acceptable diagnostic properties as they were able to discriminate between the two groups of participants.
Journal/conference proceeding
Current Psychology;
Citation
Perham, N., Howell, T. and Watt, A. (2019) 'Can a simple, short-term memory task help to screen dyslexia?', Current Psychology. (2019) (awaiting issue number)
Description
Article published in Current Psychology on 14 December 2019 (online) available open access at https://doi.org/10.1007/s12144-019-00568-4
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