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Multisensory temporal processing and short-term memory in developmental dyslexia 
Poster Presentation 
 Marja Laasonen 
Department of Psychology, University of Helsinki, Finland 
Elisabet Service 
		 Anita Vedenpää 
		 Veijo Virsu 
		      Abstract ID Number: 25      Full text: 
Not available 
     Last modified: March 1, 2005 
		Abstract 
		
		Developmental dyslexia is a difficulty in learning to read that is often accompanied by difficulties of acquiring proficiency in writing and spelling. Impaired phonological processing is the most commonly accepted predictor of reading difficulties but difficulties in temporal processing and short-term/working memory have been suggested to co-exist. These possible temporal/memory difficulties could either cause the dyslexic impairments directly or via affecting phonological processing or all the difficulties could reflect a common underlying impairment. Yet another explanation states that it is not temporal processing which is impaired but memory functions which affect (among other things) performance in tasks used in this area of research. In a series of finished and ongoing studies with adult dyslexic and fluent readers, we investigated unimodal (visual, auditory, tactile) and multisensory (audiotactile, visuotactile, audiovisual) temporal processing and short-term memory. Our results suggest that developmentally dyslexic readers suffer from both unimodal and multisensory temporal processing difficulties that aggravate with increasing adult age. These temporal difficulties are related to their phonological processing impairments. Dyslexic readers suffer also from both unimodal and multisensory short-term memory impairments. However, short-term memory in a specific modality/combination does not explain temporal processing impairment of the same modality/combination.		 
	
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