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The effects of redundant stimuli on visuospatial processing in developmental dyslexia.

Badzakova-Trajkov G, Hamm JP, Waldie KE

Department of Psychology, Research Centre for Cognitive Neuroscience, University of Auckland, Private Bag 92019, Auckland, New Zealand.

The interhemispheric deficit theory of dyslexia postulates that reading difficulties can arise from abnormal communication/collaboration between the cerebral hemispheres. A currently popular way to gather information about interhemispheric processing and integration is with the redundant stimuli task, where participants respond to stimuli presented to the left visual field, right visual field, or both visual fields simultaneously. In neurologically normal individuals, response times to bilateral simple stimulus presentations are faster than response times to a single stimulus in either visual field alone (referred to as redundancy gain). In contrast, individuals with no corpus callosum exhibit greater redundancy gains than would be expected by probability summation. In the present study, 11 children with phonological dyslexia showed a similar "over violation" of the probability (race) model when responding with the left but not the right hand. This asymmetry was not found in age- and IQ-matched control children. The results are at least partially consistent with the notion of phonological dyslexia involving deficits in the transfer of information across the corpus callosum.

Published 14 February 2005 in Neuropsychologia, 43(3): 473-8.
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