Remote Neuropsychological Intervention for Developmental Dyslexia with the Tachidino Platform: No Reduction in Effectiveness for Older Nor for More Severely Impaired Children
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Participants
2.2. Neuropsychological Tests
- Text reading: “Prove di rapidità e correttezza nella lettura del gruppo MT” (“Test of speed and accuracy in reading, developed by the MT group”) [33]. This test assesses reading abilities for meaningful texts. It provides separate scores for speed and accuracy. Texts increase in complexity with grade level, and norms are provided for each text. Validity and reliability for the MT text reading test are reported to be satisfactory without further specifications [33]. For the last published version of the test, all test-retest reliability coefficients are above 0.59 and inter-rater reliability coefficients are 1.0 for speed and 0.99 for accuracy [34].
- Single word/non-word reading: “DDE-2: Batteria per la Valutazione della Dislessia e Disortografia Evolutiva-2” (Assessment battery for Developmental Reading and Spelling Disorders-2) [35]. The battery assesses speed and accuracy (number of errors) in reading word lists (4 lists of 24 words) and non-word lists (3 lists of 16 non-words), and provides grade norms from the second to the last grade of junior high school. The test has acceptable reliability (mean test-retest coefficients are 0.77 for speed and 0.56 for accuracy).
- Single word/non-word writing: two writing-to-dictation tasks were taken from the DDE-2 battery, giving accuracy scores according to age norms in writing 48 words and 24 non-words. Although these tests are commonly employed for diagnosis of spelling disorders, no specific reliability and validity data are available.
2.3. Procedure
2.4. Treatment
- P-type (decoding strategies based on accurate perceptual analysis mainly supported by the right hemisphere-RH, resulting in slow but relatively accurate reading) if reading speed is at least 1 SD below age mean and the proportion of time-consuming errors over total errors is ≥60%;
- L-type (anticipation strategies based on linguistic abilities and mainly supported by the left hemisphere-LH, resulting in relatively fast but inaccurate reading) if reading speed is no more than 1 SD below age mean and the proportion of substantive errors over total errors is ≥60%;
- M-type (who strive to use both kinds of strategies but do so inefficiently, resulting in both slow and inaccurate reading) in all other cases (when both error types are present in similar proportion and/or when child is both slow and inaccurate in reading).
2.5. Data Analysis
3. Results
3.1. Treatment Related Changes: Comparison between Pre- and Post-Test Assessment
3.1.1. Comparison between Age Groups
3.1.2. Comparison between Severity Groups
3.1.3. Discussion
3.2. Consolidation of the Improvements: Comparison of the Pre-Treatment Scores with Follow-Up Scores
3.2.1. Comparison between Age Groups
3.2.2. Comparison between Severity Groups
3.2.3. Discussion
3.3. Treatment Related Changes: Effects of Discontinuation of Treatment between Post-Test and Follow-Up
3.3.1. Comparison between Age Groups
3.3.2. Comparison between Severity Groups
3.3.3. Discussion
4. General Discussion and Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Group 1 (Younger than 9 Years) | Group 2 (between 9 and 10 Years) | Group 3 (11 Years Old and Older) | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Mean (SD) | Cohen’s dz (p) | Mean (SD) | Cohen’s dz (p) | Mean (SD) | Cohen’s dz (p) | ||
Global reading speed | PRE | −2.40 (2.96) | −0.77 (<0.001) | −1.95 (2.01) | −0.99 (<0.001) | −2.61 (2.34) | −0.90 (<0.001) |
POST | −1.61 (2.09) | −1.05 (1.79) | −1.51 (1.75) | ||||
Global reading accuracy | PRE | −2.81 (1.97) | −1.19 (<0.001) | −2.05 (1.80) | −0.80 (<0.001) | −2.47 (1.92) | −0.71 (0.003) |
POST | −1.47 (1.28) | −1.17 (1.32) | −1.51 (1.73) | ||||
Global writing accuracy | PRE | −3.68 (2.91) | −1.46 (<0.001) | −1.53 (2.84) | −0.40 (0.015) | −1.22 (1.53) | −0.56 (0.019) |
POST | −1.73 (2.38) | −0.92 (2.24) | −0.70 (1.45) |
Group a (Less Severely Impaired) | Group b (Moderately Impaired) | Group c (Severely Impaired) | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Mean (SD) | Cohen’s dz (p) | Mean (SD) | Cohen’s dz (p) | Mean (SD) | Cohen’s dz (p) | ||
Global reading speed | PRE | −0.33 (0.46) | −0.88 (<0.001) (n = 26) | −1.96 (0.57) | −0.86 (<0.001) (n = 46) | −5.56 (3.24) | −1.38 (<0.001) (n = 19) |
POST | 0.20 (0.63) | −1.17 (0.99) | −3.81 (2.14) | ||||
Global reading accuracy | PRE | −0.63 (0.31) | −1.06 (<0.001) (n = 24) | −1.87 (0.48) | −1.06 (<0.001) (n = 40) | −4.69 (1.77) | −1.20 (<0.001) (n = 27) |
POST | −13 (0.48) | −1.12 (0.75) | −2.75 (1.53) | ||||
Global writing accuracy | PRE | 0.05 (0.54) | 0.04 (0.83) (n = 37) | −1.87 (0.63) | −1.30 (<0.001) (n = 28) | −5.79 (2.76) | −1.42 (<0.001) (n = 23) |
POST | 0.02 (0.86) | −0.68 (1.01) | −3.44 (2.76) |
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Lorusso, M.L.; Borasio, F.; Molteni, M. Remote Neuropsychological Intervention for Developmental Dyslexia with the Tachidino Platform: No Reduction in Effectiveness for Older Nor for More Severely Impaired Children. Children 2022, 9, 71. https://doi.org/10.3390/children9010071
Lorusso ML, Borasio F, Molteni M. Remote Neuropsychological Intervention for Developmental Dyslexia with the Tachidino Platform: No Reduction in Effectiveness for Older Nor for More Severely Impaired Children. Children. 2022; 9(1):71. https://doi.org/10.3390/children9010071
Chicago/Turabian StyleLorusso, Maria Luisa, Francesca Borasio, and Massimo Molteni. 2022. "Remote Neuropsychological Intervention for Developmental Dyslexia with the Tachidino Platform: No Reduction in Effectiveness for Older Nor for More Severely Impaired Children" Children 9, no. 1: 71. https://doi.org/10.3390/children9010071
APA StyleLorusso, M. L., Borasio, F., & Molteni, M. (2022). Remote Neuropsychological Intervention for Developmental Dyslexia with the Tachidino Platform: No Reduction in Effectiveness for Older Nor for More Severely Impaired Children. Children, 9(1), 71. https://doi.org/10.3390/children9010071