51重口猎奇

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The relationship between reading comprehension, working memory and language in children with cochlear implants

Author

Summary, in English

Working memory, language, and reading comprehension are strongly

associated in children with severe and profound hearing impairment treated

by cochlear implants (CI). In this study we explore this relationship in sixteen Swedish children with CI. We found that over 60% of the children with CI performed at the level of their hearing peers in a reading comprehension test. Demographic factors were not predictive of reading comprehension, but a complex working memory task was. Reading percentile was significantly correlated to the working memory test, but no other correlations between reading and cognitive/linguistic factors remained significant after age was factored out. Individual results from a comparison of the two best and the two poorest readers corroborate group results, confirming the important role of working memory for reading as measured by comprehension of words andmsentences in this group of children.

Publishing year

2007

Language

English

Pages

163-186

Publication/Series

Acta Neuropsychologica

Volume

5

Issue

4

Full text

  • - 2 MB

Links

Document type

Journal article

Publisher

MEDSPORTPRESS Publishing House

Topic

  • Oto-rhino-laryngology
  • Other Medical and Health Sciences not elsewhere specified

Keywords

  • hearing impaiment
  • cognition
  • phonological processing
  • lexical access

Status

Published

ISBN/ISSN/Other

  • ISSN: 1730-7503