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Testing the double-deficit hypothesis in an adult sample
Authors:Carlin J Miller  Scott R Miller  Juliana S Bloom  Lauren Jones  William Lindstrom  Jason Craggs  Mauricio Garcia-Barrera  Margaret Semrud-Clikeman  Jeffrey W Gilger  George W Hynd
Affiliation:(1) Department of Psychology, Queens College, City University of New York, 65-30 Kissena Boulevard, 11367 Flushing, NY;(2) Mount Sinai School of Medicine, New York, New York;(3) University of Georgia, Athens, Georgia;(4) University of Texas at Austin, Austin, Texas;(5) Purdue University, West Lafayette, Indiana
Abstract:The double-deficit hypothesis of dyslexia posits that reading deficits are more severe in individuals with weaknesses in phonological awareness and rapid naming than in individuals with deficits in only one of these reading composite skills. In this study, the hypothesis was tested in an adult sample as a model of reading achievement. Participants were parents of children referred for evaluation of reading difficulties. Approximately half of all participants reported difficulty learning to read in childhood and a small subset demonstrated ongoing weaknesses in reading. Structural equation modeling results suggest that the double-deficit hypothesis is an accurate model for understanding adult reading achievement. Better reading achievement was associated with better phonological awareness and faster rapid automatized naming in adults. Posthoc analyses indicated that individuals with double deficits had significantly lower reading achievement than individuals with single deficits or no deficits.
Keywords:Adults  dyslexia  phonological awareness  rapid naming  reading  reading disability  statistical models
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