Dyslexia could affect more than reading ability

Publicly released:
Australia; QLD

Dyslexia impacts more than reading ability, according to Aussie and international researchers who found kids with dyslexia pick up visual information slower than their typically developing peers. In the study, kids aged six to 14 watched a mass of moving dots and identified their average direction of motion while researchers measured their brain activity. Their response times and accuracy were recorded, and the team found dyslexic children took longer to gather visual evidence than their typically developing peers. This was also reflected in their brain activity, and the results suggest there may be altered motion processing and decision-making in the brains of those with dyslexia.

Media release

From: Society for Neuroscience

Visual Processing is Slower in Children with Dyslexia

Children with dyslexia are slower to pick up visual evidence, which is echoed by their brain activity

Dyslexia impacts more than reading ability. Children with dyslexia pick up visual information slower than their typically developing peers, according to new research published in JNeurosci.

Some researchers believe dyslexia is a visual processing disorder at its core because a brain pathway involved in processing motion is also altered in dyslexia. Still, a debate rages over whether impaired motion processing drives dyslexia. Some have argued that we may be able to improve dyslexic reading skills by training visual processing skills.

In a new study by Manning et al., children from ages six to fourteen watched a mass of moving dots and identified their average direction of motion while the researchers measured their brain activity with EEG. Mathematical modelling of their response time and accuracy revealed the dyslexic children took longer to gather visual evidence than their typically developing peers. The behavioral differences corresponded to differences in brain activity, too. Synchronized activity in centro-parietal regions, areas involved in decision making, steadily increased until the child made a decision. This ramping up of brain activity happened more gradually in children with dyslexia. These results suggest altered motion processing and decision-making in dyslexia, the cause of which remains unknown.

Journal/
conference:
JNeurosci
Organisation/s: The University of Queensland
Funder: The project was funded by a Sir Henry Wellcome Postdoctoral Fellowship awarded to CM (grant number 204685/Z/16/Z) and a James S. McDonnell Foundation Understanding Human Cognition Scholar Award to GS. NJE was supported by an Australian Research Council Discovery Early Career Researcher Award (DE200101130). We are grateful to Dorothy Bishop for providing funding for research assistance.
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