Numerous studies have shown that imitating observed actions belongs to the same category of processes involved in planning and executing actions. New competencies may be acquired by actually executing a task or by executing a task after having seen how to do it. The performance of thirty dyslexic children was compared with that of an age- and gender-matched group of thirty normally reading children on tasks of learning a visuo-motor sequence by observation or by trial and error. The children observed an actor detecting a visuo-motor sequence and then performed the task reproducing either the previously observed sequence or a new one (Learning by Observation), or detected a sequence by trial and error (Learning by Doing), or first performed the task by trial and error and then performed it after an observational training (Learning by Observation after Doing). Results demonstrate that the dyslexic children were severely impaired in learning a sequence by observation, were able to detect a sequence by trial and error, and became as efficient as normal readers in reproducing an observed sequence after a task of learning by doing. Thus, the impaired ability to learn by observation could be reversed by agentive experience that supplied dyslexic children with a powerful learning mechanism, which enabled them to efficiently transfer action information across modalities. The beneficial effect of practice on the ability to learn by observation could provide dyslexic children a useful chance to acquire new cognitive abilities through more tuned teaching approach. (C) 2011 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

Is learning by observation impaired in children with dyslexia? / Deny, Menghini; Stefano, Vicari; Laura, Mandolesi; Petrosini, Laura. - In: NEUROPSYCHOLOGIA. - ISSN 0028-3932. - STAMPA. - 49:7(2011), pp. 1996-2003. [10.1016/j.neuropsychologia.2011.03.029]

Is learning by observation impaired in children with dyslexia?

PETROSINI, Laura
2011

Abstract

Numerous studies have shown that imitating observed actions belongs to the same category of processes involved in planning and executing actions. New competencies may be acquired by actually executing a task or by executing a task after having seen how to do it. The performance of thirty dyslexic children was compared with that of an age- and gender-matched group of thirty normally reading children on tasks of learning a visuo-motor sequence by observation or by trial and error. The children observed an actor detecting a visuo-motor sequence and then performed the task reproducing either the previously observed sequence or a new one (Learning by Observation), or detected a sequence by trial and error (Learning by Doing), or first performed the task by trial and error and then performed it after an observational training (Learning by Observation after Doing). Results demonstrate that the dyslexic children were severely impaired in learning a sequence by observation, were able to detect a sequence by trial and error, and became as efficient as normal readers in reproducing an observed sequence after a task of learning by doing. Thus, the impaired ability to learn by observation could be reversed by agentive experience that supplied dyslexic children with a powerful learning mechanism, which enabled them to efficiently transfer action information across modalities. The beneficial effect of practice on the ability to learn by observation could provide dyslexic children a useful chance to acquire new cognitive abilities through more tuned teaching approach. (C) 2011 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
2011
imitation; learning disabilities; observational learning; sequential learning
01 Pubblicazione su rivista::01a Articolo in rivista
Is learning by observation impaired in children with dyslexia? / Deny, Menghini; Stefano, Vicari; Laura, Mandolesi; Petrosini, Laura. - In: NEUROPSYCHOLOGIA. - ISSN 0028-3932. - STAMPA. - 49:7(2011), pp. 1996-2003. [10.1016/j.neuropsychologia.2011.03.029]
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11573/379327
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