“…Across studies of paired associate learning, school-aged children with dyslexia are less accurate at visual-verbal paired associate learning than their peers with typical reading skills (e.g., Litt & Nation, 2014;Mayringer & Wimmer, 2000;Messbauer & de Jong, 2003Thomson & Goswami, 2010;Vellutino, Steger, Harding, & Phillips, 1975), but this depends on the characteristics of words used in the study. Mayringer and Wimmer (2000) and Messbauer and de Jong (2006) reported conditions for visual-verbal paired associate learning in which children with dyslexia performed as well as their peers with typical reading skills. These conditions involved short words (three to four phonemes) that were familiar names.…”