“…Such a dichotomy is consistent with the hypothesis put forward by regarding the independence of the VA span theory (Bosse & Valdois, 2007) and the sluggish attentional shifting (SAS, ) theory of developmental dyslexia, two theoretical accounts that further dissociate with respect to the contribution of visual attention difficulties to phonological deficits. On one hand, a large body of research shows that VA span and phoneme awareness deficits typically dissociate in developmental dyslexia (Bosse et al, 2007 ;Germano et al, 2014 ;Lallier et al, 2010c ;Zoubrinetzky et al, 2014 ;See Saksida et al, 2016 for contradictory results and Reilhac et al, submitted, for a response) and that VA span and phoneme awareness are independent unique predictors of reading performance in typical readers (Bosse & Valdois, 2009 ;Lobier et al, 2013 ;Valdois et al, submitted ;van den Boer et al, 2013). On the other hand, sluggish temporal attentional shifting typically cooccurs with phonological deficits in individuals with developmental dyslexia (Lallier et al, 2009(Lallier et al, , 2010a(Lallier et al, , 2010b(Lallier et al, , 2010c and exogenous spatial attention deficits were reported in only a subgroup of dyslexic children with very poor pseudo-word reading and poor phonological skills (Facoetti et al, 2010;Ruffino et al, 2014;see however, Banfi, Kemény, Gangl, Schulte-Körne, Moll & Manderl, 2017).…”