Do early musical impairments predict later reading difficulties? A longitudinal study of pre-readers with and without familial risk for dyslexia

IF 3.1 1区 心理学 Q2 PSYCHOLOGY, DEVELOPMENTAL
Manon Couvignou, Hugo Peyre, Franck Ramus, Régine Kolinsky
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Abstract

The present longitudinal study investigated the hypothesis that early musical skills (as measured by melodic and rhythmic perception and memory) predict later literacy development via a mediating effect of phonology. We examined 130 French-speaking children, 31 of whom with a familial risk for developmental dyslexia (DD). Their abilities in the three domains were assessed longitudinally with a comprehensive battery of behavioral tests in kindergarten, first grade, and second grade. Using a structural equation modeling approach, we examined potential longitudinal effects from music to literacy via phonology. We then investigated how familial risk for DD may influence these relationships by testing whether atypical music processing is a risk factor for DD. Results showed that children with a familial risk for DD consistently underperformed children without familial risk in music, phonology, and literacy. A small effect of musical ability on literacy via phonology was observed, but may have been induced by differences in stability across domains over time. Furthermore, early musical skills did not add significant predictive power to later literacy difficulties beyond phonological skills and family risk status. These findings are consistent with the idea that certain key auditory skills are shared between music and speech processing, and between DD and congenital amusia. However, they do not support the notion that music perception and memory skills can serve as a reliable early marker of DD, nor as a valuable target for reading remediation.

Research Highlights

  • Music, phonology, and literacy skills of 130 children, 31 of whom with a familial risk for dyslexia, were examined longitudinally.
  • Children with a familial risk for dyslexia consistently underperformed children without familial risk in musical, phonological, and literacy skills.
  • Structural equation models showed a small effect of musical ability in kindergarten on literacy in second grade, via phonology in first grade.
  • However, early musical skills did not add significant predictive power to later literacy difficulties beyond phonological skills and family risk status.
早期音乐障碍是否预示着日后的阅读困难?对存在和不存在家族性阅读障碍风险的学龄前儿童的纵向研究
本纵向研究探讨了这样一个假设,即早期音乐技能(通过旋律和节奏的感知和记忆来衡量)可通过语音的中介效应预测日后的读写能力发展。我们对 130 名讲法语的儿童进行了研究,其中 31 名儿童有发展性阅读障碍(DD)的家族遗传风险。他们在幼儿园、一年级和二年级时接受了一系列综合行为测试,对这三个领域的能力进行了纵向评估。通过结构方程建模方法,我们研究了从音乐到语音识字的潜在纵向影响。然后,我们通过测试非典型音乐处理是否是导致 DD 的风险因素,研究了 DD 的家族风险如何影响这些关系。结果显示,有家族遗传风险的儿童在音乐、语音和识字方面的表现一直低于没有家族遗传风险的儿童。音乐能力通过音韵学对识字能力的影响较小,但这可能是由于随着时间的推移,各领域的稳定性存在差异。此外,除了语音技能和家庭风险状况之外,早期音乐技能并不能显著预测儿童日后的识字困难。这些研究结果与音乐和语言处理之间以及残疾儿童和先天性失聪之间共享某些关键听觉技能的观点一致。研究亮点 对 130 名儿童的音乐、语音和识字能力进行了纵向研究,其中 31 名儿童有家族性阅读障碍风险。有家族性阅读障碍风险的儿童在音乐、语音和读写能力方面的表现一直低于无家族性风险的儿童。结构方程模型显示,幼儿园音乐能力对二年级读写能力的影响较小,而对一年级语音能力的影响较大。然而,除了语音技能和家庭风险状况之外,早期音乐技能对日后的识字困难并没有显著的预测作用。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
8.10
自引率
8.10%
发文量
132
期刊介绍: Developmental Science publishes cutting-edge theory and up-to-the-minute research on scientific developmental psychology from leading thinkers in the field. It is currently the only journal that specifically focuses on human developmental cognitive neuroscience. Coverage includes: - Clinical, computational and comparative approaches to development - Key advances in cognitive and social development - Developmental cognitive neuroscience - Functional neuroimaging of the developing brain
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