Abstract
Several authors consider reading an important activity in
school, professional and personal life. Perceptual processes, hemispheric lateralization,
vision and phonological awareness are factors that intervene in reading skills that can
influence the way oflearning. This study aimed to evaluate the effect of the use of Irlen
color transparencies on the quality of ocular follow-up during reading and the possible
relationship with laterality. Participants werefifty-three (53) children, 6 and 7 years old,
respectively 32 children with Irlen Syndrome (IS) or visual stress and 21 children as the
reference group. All children were subjected to a series of visual standard tests to assess
color blindness (Ishihara test), neuropsychological maturity (CUMANES test), Irlen syndrome
(IRPS test1) and rapid eye movement (K-D test2). Research results reveal that reading
capacity is not related to laterality, the use of color significantly improves the
perceptual process of reading, and differences in reading attainment is noteworthy between
children with Irlen and children without Irlen syndrome. New studies are suggested to
consider the effect of attentional abilities, phonological awareness, and verbal memory in
reading.
| Original language | Spanish |
|---|---|
| Journal | Maskana |
| State | Published - 2018 |
| Externally published | Yes |
Keywords
- Laterality; saccadic eye movements; Irlen syndrome; reading proficiency; color K-D test