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Dyslexia
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We read with our ears
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Children acquire language by listening to
those around them talking. In the first year of life they
are building an ever-increasing store of speech sounds. This
store is phonological memory the units of sounds that
make up words. If these sounds are stored in phonological
memory in a faulty manner, the childs perception of
speech will be compromised, as will reading and spelling.
Research by Paula Tallal shows that Dyslexic (and language
impaired) children are unable to perceive fast sounds. These
are the stop consonants that change to the vowel frequency
before 40 milliseconds. Consonants such as b, t, k, d not
perceived by the slow sensory processing system of the average
Dyslexic and consequently auditory nerves are not stimulated
into action in the same way. Many speech sound distinctions
are lost.
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Tallal, P. (1980) "Brain & Language" (9)
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Tallal P & Piercy, M (1973) Nature, (241)
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Nagarajan S et al "Cortical auditory processing in
poor readers"
Proceedings National Academy of Sciences, vol. 96, issue 11,
(1999)
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This abnormal auditory processing is due to smaller neuronal
fields in the left medial geniculate nuclei (MGN) according
a post-mortem study of Dyslexics (Galaburda A et al, 1994,
"Evidence for Aberrant Auditory Anatomy in Developmental
Dyslexia" in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences,
Vol. 91), and backed up by brain imaging studies showing the
"knock-on" effect of auditory inefficiencies are
weak phonological processing in Brocas area (left frontal
gyrus) which is often the target of stroke damage, which suggests
this area is responsible for speech articulation. When speech
is lost due to damage here it is called aphasia.
Other research suggests a timing circuit throughout the brain
that simultaneously identifies letters (in the visual cortex)
while the phonological analysis is progressing. After this
meaning is mediated by the superior temporal gyrus and parts
of the middle temporal and supramarginal gyri.
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(Shaywitz S. "Dyslexia" Scientific American, Nov
1996).
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Tallal P. The Science of Literacy Proceeding National Academy
of Sciences 97: 2402
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Some Dyslexics show a pattern of under activation in the
visual regions with a corresponding over activation in the
phonological regions, when measured by Qeeg (quantitative
eeg, a measure of brain activation). There seem therefore
to be both sub-types and developmental stages of Dyslexia.
The consistency of the brain based under and over activation
in certain areas suggests a genetic causation and this is
backed up by studies of families where Dyslexia affects generation
after generation.
But early middle ear infections too, can cause a child to
perceive speech sounds unevenly so that some are heard before
others and the whole auditory system can be mistimed, and
sounds misequenced. Thus there is a delay (in milliseconds)
in the perception of speech sounds, which others notice as
a time lag between their speaking and the childs response.
This affects the rate at which phonemes are matched to the
syllable to recognize a word, the "inner voice"
cant keep up with the eyes and reading is inefficient.
Another environmental cause is premature birth This also
is highly correlated with difficulties in the acquisition
of literacy since the auditory nerve active in the last trimester,
is not activated and primed as much as it would be if the
baby was full term, especially if the baby is put into an
incubator which cuts off sound. This has effects on the perception
of speech sounds. Another environmental cause can be early
exposure to the sounds of a second language before the child
is secure about the sounds of the first language. While most
children manage this quite successfully and go on to become
bi-lingual, if there is any inefficiency in auditory perception
it can inhibit the acquisition of literacy.
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And our Eyes must synchronize
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Slowness in processing affects all the senses in Specific
Learning Difficulties. Perception refers to the interpretation
the brain makes of information from the senses. If the senses
cant convey a rapid feedback due to lack of neurons
devoted to the function then information is mistimed and misequenced.
In fact most Dyslexic children have been taken to have their
hearing and eyes checked early on, only to be told by the
optician and audiometric Ian that there is nothing wrong with
their eyes or ears. This is sometimes bad news for them
their parents or teachers may make a negative judgment
laziness or stupidity or any number of reasons for their failure
in learning to read. The accounts children give of blurring
print, losing lines in reading text or music, headaches on
reading, not being able to see the blackboard, copy fast enough
or listen to the teacher are all hard for a parent to interpret
after being told there is nothing wrong at the physical level.
But these complaints are common and are due to inadequate
processing of visual, auditory and kinesthetic information.
In fact up to 25/30% of children may have light sensitivity
and colour based visual perceptual problems. The current opinion
is that at least some of the observed problems (glare off
the page, moving and blurring of text, sore, watery eyes on
reading, losing lines, needing to reread constantly to get
the sense,) are due to an analogous deficit (to the auditory
problems) in the visual pathways. The lateral Geniculate nucleus
has been identified as smaller in cellular content in Dyslexics
than in normal readers by Margaret Livingstone at Harvard
University "Physiological and anatomical evidence for
a magnocellular defect in developmental Dyslexia" Proc.
Natl.Acad. Sci. 1991:88.
Most visual information moving from the retina via the lateral
geniculate nucleus of the thalamus travels through one of
3 visual pathways. One of these, the magnocellular is thought
to carry visual information about space such as movement,
depth and the relationships between them. The magnocellular
is thickly myelinated (for rapid transmission) and ends up
in the parietal cortex. The other important visual pathway,
the parvocellular, the "what" pathway, which ends
in the temporal cortex, must synchronize for efficient reading,
so the theory is that when the magnocellular is not able to
keep up with the parvocellular, visual tracking and fixation
is unstable when the eyes sweep across a page. Visual information
carried through the magnocellular in Dyslexic brains, has
been shown by brain imaging studies (Eden, G. in Nature, 1995)
to be poor in identifying movement in comparison to normal
readers. By the time the information gets to the visual cortex
the signal is quite faint in Dyslexics compared to normal
readers. Thus the magno cant control eye movements or
guide them to the object to be looked at. Some researchers
believe this means the magno or "What" pathway acts
as an attentional spotlight. (Vidyasagar T. (1999) "Impaired
Visual Search in Dyslexia related to the role of the Magnocellular
pathway in attention" Neuroreport; 10) Studies showed
that Dyslexic children are poorer at a visual search task
than normal readers and the more distracters there were in
the background the worse they did because reading places great
demands on the attentional spotlight, far more than a complex
visual scene. In other words a slow visual processing analogous
to the slow auditory processing mentioned above. This has
led some researchers to propose an auditory magnocellular
system, analogous to the visual
For some children the interaction of these problems causes
a light sensitivity with headaches, pattern glare off white
pages (copying their work on pastel colours helps)
this is known as scotopic sensitivity, first identified by
Helen Irlen see her help for parents book "Reading
by the colours". Her solution is to screen the child
or adult using coloured lenses until the right portion of
the spectrum is inhibited or enhanced. This detected by reading
rate, clarity of depth perception and subjective feeling of
comfort.
Behavioral optometrists give vision exercises to help strengthen
the convergence and accommodation.
Other techniques are monocular occlusion (covering the left
eye with opaque lenses while reading)
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Sub-types of Dyslexia
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| Reading requires both; |
Phonological (sound based) analysis
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Levels of phonological awareness
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| 1 |
Syllables
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c/a/t
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| 2 |
onset and rime
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tr / ip
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| 3 |
analogy
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zip/nip beak/bean
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(need good auditory sequencing and sound discrimination)
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Orthographic (visual code) analysis
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| 1 |
requires orientation
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| 2 |
visual sequencing
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| 3 |
visual tracking
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details of shape horizontals, verticals,
dots etc.
Letter to sound mapping is all locked into
a precise, hierachchial sequence of neural events.
This must be carried out in milliseconds or
comprehension collapses.
A grammatical analysis is also going on. The
subject and object of a sentence must be identified
before the brain starts to analyze the meaning
of the sentence, so if there is any slowness
in the phonological or orthographic analysis
then the brain never gets to the meaning level,
or only imperfectly so.
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Phonological sensitivity
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In western writing we break each syllable down into individual
phonemic segments represented by alphabetic symbols. (Cat
= c/a/t/) Phonemes are a human invention, unlike syllables
they are not generated by neurologically distinct programmes,
i.e. they are physiologically arbitrary
Phonological skill correlates with the ability to switch
attention from a word's meaning to an analysis of its acoustic
properties.
Normal readers can track changes in the pitch of a sound
and can segment words into their constituent phonemes to match
them to symbol. Insensitivity to temporal auditory changes
correlates with poor phonological awareness which affects
reading of irregular words, non-words, homophones, delay in
sensitivity to rhythm of speech kissing fish, kissing
fish (meaning is added to by prosody, for initial parsing
analysis)
Therefore the best test of phonological awareness is can
they read non-words. These have the same sound structure as
the English language but the child has never seen them before
so cannot rely on visual memory.
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Orthographic skill
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Orthographic skill correlates with ability to use and identify
familiar letter sequences with minimal phonological information
letter order, frequency, spatial position, (spelling)
Orthographic sensitivity is independent of phonological
sensitivity and can contribute to poor reading even when phonological
skills are normal.
(Good motion detectors are less likely to mistake anagrams
for real words (xepi for pepsi) Even in non-dyslexic children
these sensory abilities correlate with reading and spelling.
The best test of orthographic skill is homophones
can they distinguish reign from rain, sale from sail etc.When
auditory and visual sensitivity are analyzed together they
can explain 93% of variance in reading.
Both types of discriminatory sensitivity, orthographic and
phonological, have 40/50% heritability.
Evidence is based on studies reported in;
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Talcott, J, Witton. C. et al. 2000 "Dynamic sensitivity
and childrens word decoding skills" PNAS, 97, 6,
2952 57
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The sensitivity of the magnocellular component of visual
processing can be assessed psychophysically by using stimuli
that selectively stimulate it. Flickering lights, low intensity,
low contrast, coarse (low spatial frequency) gratings and
moving targets stimulate the magno selectively. But less so
in Dyslexics .. Motion sensitivity is tested by a random dot
"kinematogram", a square of moving dots, and Dyslexics
need to see 30% more dots move before they perceive movement,
in relation to normal readers.
Similarly sensitivity to amplitude modulation (perception
of change of auditory frequency) measured at 2Hz FM sensitivity
is the best predictor of phonological Dyslexia, this reflects
the phonemic range in language.
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"Impaired Neuronal Timing in Developmental Dyslexia
The Magnocellular Hypotheis" Stein J. et al (1999)
"Dyslexia" 5: 59 77
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