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Abstract
It has been suggested that eye movement abnormalities seen in dyslexics are attributable
to their language problems. In order to investigate this claim, we studied eye movements
in dyslexic children, during several non-reading tasks. Dyslexic children were compared
to normal and backward readers on measures of fixation, vergence amplitude, saccade
and smooth pursuit. The results were compared to the children's phonological ability.
Dyslexic children (n = 26) had significantly worse eye movement stability during fixation
of small targets than normal children (n = 39). Vergence amplitudes were lower for
dyslexics than for controls. A qualitative assessment of saccadic eye movements revealed
that dyslexics exhibit fixation instability at the end of saccades. Assessment of
smooth pursuit revealed poor smooth pursuit in the dyslexic group, particularly when
pursuing a target moving from left to right. Dyslexic children also performed significantly
worse than normal children on a test of phonological awareness (Pig Latin). Eye movement
results were studied in the light of the findings on phonological awareness: dyslexics
with small vergence amplitudes also always have poor phonemic awareness. However,
poor fixation control is found in dyslexics with or without poor phonological ability.
The backward reading children performed similar to the dyslexics on all tests, suggesting
that the deficiencies observed in this study are not specific to children with dyslexia.
The problems experienced by the children (revealed by a questionnaire) are in agreement
with those measured in terms of eye movement recordings and phonemic awareness. Sex,
handedness, IQ or the presence of attention deficit disorder (ADD) did not appear
to influence the children's performances on any of the eye movement tasks. The presence
of oculomotor abnormalities in a non-reading task strongly suggests that the underlying
deficit in the control of eye movements seen in dyslexics is not caused by language
problems alone.