This is supported by the fact that deep dyslexia is often present in patients suffering from production errors resulting from Expressive aphasia.
12.
This has resulted in deep dyslexia being considered a symptom-complex and has led to much research into why this variety of symptoms may co-occur in so many patients.
13.
The " Glosser and Friedman ( continuum ) model " is based upon the concept that deep dyslexia and phonological dyslexia are opposite endpoints on a " continuum " of reading disability.
14.
In that study, the patient who was the exception was the least severely damaged, contributing to a view of phonological dyslexia and deep dyslexia as points on a continuum rather than discrete disorders.
15.
At that time, Marcel was working with neurological patients who showed deep dyslexia, and was interested in their errors involving associatively or semantically related words ( e . g . sleep and dream ).
16.
Deep dyslexia is usually classified as an " acquired reading disorder ", as opposed to a " developmental dyslexia ", in previously literate adults as a consequence of a brain injury.
17.
Ease of predication may not explain specific symptoms of deep dyslexia, but rather indicates that deep dyslexics read using imagery, or a predicational route, rather than the more precise mechanisms used in normal reading.
18.
Deep dyslexia appears to be a more severe form of phonological dyslexia; however, symptoms in patients can change over time so that an initial diagnosis of deep dyslexia is later better described as strictly a phonological dyslexia.
19.
Deep dyslexia appears to be a more severe form of phonological dyslexia; however, symptoms in patients can change over time so that an initial diagnosis of deep dyslexia is later better described as strictly a phonological dyslexia.
20.
Previous studies had shown that typical in patients with deep dyslexia, typical members of a semantic category ( like " robin " in the category of " birds " ) are processed faster than atypical members of the same category ( like " ostrich " ), known as the semantic typicality effect.