AI Article Synopsis

  • Reading skills in hearing children are linked to their phonological processing abilities, typically assessed through nonword repetition tasks, which require understanding and manipulating sounds.
  • In a study involving deaf children with cochlear implants, it was found that better performance in nonword repetition correlated with improved nonword reading, single word reading, and sentence comprehension.
  • Additionally, factors like communication mode, nonverbal IQ, and lexical diversity from spoken language played important roles in connecting nonword repetition to reading skills, indicating that strong phonological skills are crucial for reading development in these children.

Article Abstract

Reading skills in hearing children are closely related to their phonological processing skills, often measured using a nonword repetition task in which a child relies on abstract phonological representations in order to decompose, encode, rehearse in working memory and reproduce novel phonological patterns. In the present study of children who are deaf and have cochlear implants, we found that nonword repetition performance was significantly related to nonword reading, single word reading and sentence comprehension. Communication mode and nonverbal IQ were also found to be correlated with nonword repetition and reading skills. A measure of the children's lexical diversity, derived from an oral language sample, was found to be a mediating factor in the relationship between nonword repetition and reading skills. Taken together, the present findings suggest that the construction of robust phonological representations and phonological processing skills may be important contributors to the development of reading in children who are deaf and use cochlear implants.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3111020PMC

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