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The contribution of short-term memory capacity to reading ability in adolescents with cochlear implants
Affiliation:1. Great Ormond Street Hospital for Children NHS Foundation Trust, Great Ormond Street, London, WC1N 3JH, UK;2. Royal Holloway, University of London, Egham Hill, Egham, Surrey, TW20 0EX, UK;1. Chalmers University of Technology, SE-41296 Göteborg, Sweden;2. VTT Technical Research Centre of Finland, FI-02044 Espoo, Finland;3. Aalto University, FI-00076 AALTO, Espoo, Finland;4. FOI Swedish Defence Research Agency, CBRN Defence and Security, SE-90182 Umeå, Sweden;1. Audiology Program, Faculty of Health Sciences, Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia, Jalan Raja Muda Abdul Aziz, 50300, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia;2. Institute of Ear Hearing & Speech, Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia, Jalan Temerloh, 53200, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia;1. Department of Otolaryngology, Faculty of Medicine, Medipol University, Istanbul, Turkey;2. Speech Language pathologist, Audiology Unit, Institue of Health Sciences, Gazi University, Ankara, Turkey;1. Center for Interdisciplinary Research in Health (CIIS) in Universidade Católica Portuguesa, Portugal;2. Centro de Linguística da Universidade NOVA de Lisboa, Portugal;3. Universidade de Lisboa, FLUL, CLUL, Portugal;4. Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia, Portugal
Abstract:ObjectiveThis study aimed to establish the relationship between short-term memory capacity and reading skills in adolescents with cochlear implants.Methods and materialsA between-groups design compared a group of young people with cochlear implants with a group of hearing peers on measures of reading, and auditory and visual short-term memory capacity. The groups were matched for non-verbal IQ and age. The adolescents with cochlear implants were recruited from the Cochlear Implant Programme at a specialist children's hospital. The hearing participants were recruited from the same schools as those attended by the implanted adolescents. Participants were 18 cochlear implant users and 14 hearing controls, aged between 12 and 18 years. All used English as their main language and had no significant learning disability or neuro-developmental disorder.Short-term memory capacity was assessed in the auditory modality using Forward and Reverse Digit Span from the WISC IV UK, and visually using Forward and Reverse Memory from the Leiter-R. Individual word reading, reading comprehension and pseudoword decoding were assessed using the WIAT II UK.ResultsA series of ANOVAs revealed that the adolescents with cochlear implants had significantly poorer auditory short-term memory capacity and reading skills (on all measures) compared with their hearing peers. However, when Forward Digit Span was entered into the analyses as a covariate, none of the differences remained statistically significant.ConclusionsDeficits in immediate auditory memory persist into adolescence in deaf children with cochlear implants. Short-term auditory memory capacity is an important neurocognitive process in the development of reading skills after cochlear implantation in childhood that remains evident in later adolescence.
Keywords:Cochlear implant  Adolescents  Reading  Memory  Outcome
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