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Dyslexia and dyscalculia: which neuropsychological processes distinguish the two developmental disorders?

Alessandra Mingozzi, Valentina Tobia, Gian Marco Marzocchi

2023Child Neuropsychology13 citationsDOI

Abstract

This study analyses the specific neuropsychological profiles of children with dyslexia and/or dyscalculia, in particular concerning phonological awareness, lexical access, working memory and numerical processing. Four groups were selected, through a screening process that used strict criteria, from 1568 7-10-year-old children: 90 with typical development, 61 with dyslexia, 13 with dyscalculia, and 14 with dyslexia + dyscalculia. Children with dyslexia show a deficit in phonological processing, lexical access, and verbal working memory, especially with alphabetic stimuli. Children with developmental dyscalculia show a deficit of phonological processing, verbal working memory with digits and visual-spatial working memory. They also show an impairment in spatial representation of numbers and in the automatic access to numerical semantics to a greater extent than those with double disturbance. Children with dyslexia + dyscalculia show a profile generally characterized by the summation of the deficits of the two disorders, although they have a lower deficit in access to numerical semantics and mental representation of numbers.

Topics & Concepts

DyslexiaDyscalculiaPsychologyWorking memoryNeuropsychologyCognitive psychologyBiological theories of dyslexiaRepresentation (politics)Developmental psychologyCognitionAudiologyDevelopmental dyslexiaReading (process)LinguisticsNeuroscienceMedicineLawPolitical sciencePoliticsPhilosophyCognitive and developmental aspects of mathematical skillsReading and Literacy DevelopmentMathematics Education and Teaching Techniques
Dyslexia and dyscalculia: which neuropsychological processes distinguish the two developmental disorders? | Litcius