Integration of visual motion and orientation signals in dyslexic children: an equivalent noise approach

Author:

Manning Catherine12ORCID,Hulks Victoria1,Tibber Marc S.3,Dakin Steven C.45ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Experimental Psychology, University of Oxford, UK

2. School of Psychology and Clinical Language Sciences, University of Reading, UK

3. Department of Clinical, Educational and Health Psychology, UCL, UK

4. School of Optometry and Vision Science, University of Auckland, New Zealand

5. UCL Institute of Ophthalmology, University College London, UK

Abstract

Dyslexic individuals have been reported to have reduced global motion sensitivity, which could be attributed to various causes including atypical magnocellular or dorsal stream function, impaired spatial integration, increased internal noise and/or reduced external noise exclusion. Here, we applied an equivalent noise experimental paradigm alongside a traditional motion-coherence task to determine what limits global motion processing in dyslexia. We also presented static analogues of the motion tasks (orientation tasks) to investigate whether perceptual differences in dyslexia were restricted to motion processing. We compared the performance of 48 dyslexic and 48 typically developing children aged 8 to 14 years in these tasks and used equivalent noise modelling to estimate levels of internal noise (the precision associated with estimating each element's direction/orientation) and sampling (the effective number of samples integrated to judge the overall direction/orientation). While group differences were subtle, dyslexic children had significantly higher internal noise estimates for motion discrimination, and higher orientation-coherence thresholds, than typical children. Thus, while perceptual differences in dyslexia do not appear to be restricted to motion tasks, motion and orientation processing seem to be affected differently. The pattern of results also differs from that previously reported in autistic children, suggesting perceptual processing differences are condition-specific.

Funder

Wellcome Trust

University of Oxford Returning Carers Fund

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

Multidisciplinary

Reference73 articles.

1. British Dyslexia Association. 2010 What is dyslexia? Retrieved 9 June 2020. See https://www.bdadyslexia.org.uk/dyslexia/about-dyslexia/what-is-dyslexia.

2. Rose J. 2009 Identifying and teaching children and young people with dyslexia and literacy difficulties (The rose report). Nottingham, UK: DCSF Publications.

3. Phonological skills and their role in learning to read: A meta-analytic review.

4. Specific reading disability (dyslexia): what have we learned in the past four decades?

5. The Dyslexia Debate

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