A randomized controlled trial on the beneficial effects of training letter-speech sound integration on reading fluency in children with dyslexia

Open Access
Authors
Publication date 02-12-2015
Journal PLoS ONE
Article number e0143914
Volume | Issue number 10 | 12
Number of pages 24
Organisations
  • Faculty of Social and Behavioural Sciences (FMG) - Psychology Research Institute (PsyRes)
Abstract
A recent account of dyslexia assumes that a failure to develop automated letter-speech sound integration might be responsible for the observed lack of reading fluency. This study uses a pre-test-training-post-test design to evaluate the effects of a training program based on letter-speech sound associations with a special focus on gains in reading fluency. A sample of 44 children with dyslexia and 23 typical readers, aged 8 to 9, was recruited. Children with dyslexia were randomly allocated to either the training program group (n = 23) or a waiting-list control group (n = 21). The training intensively focused on letter-speech sound mapping and consisted of 34 individual sessions of 45 minutes over a five month period. The children with dyslexia showed substantial reading gains for the main word reading and spelling measures after training, improving at a faster rate than typical readers and waiting-list controls. The results are interpreted within the conceptual framework assuming a multisensory integration deficit as the most proximal cause of dysfluent reading in dyslexia.
Document type Article
Note With supporting information
Language English
Published at https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0143914
Downloads
510248 (Final published version)
journal.pone.0143914.s001 (Other version)
journal.pone.0143914.s002 (Other version)
journal.pone.0143914.s003 (Other version)
Permalink to this page
Back