Children with dyslexia have trouble reading and writing, but the root of
the problem may actually be in their brain's sound-processing
regions. A new study found that targeting these areas with a workout
disguised as a video game improved dyslexic children's literary
skills.



Researchers at Children's Hospital Boston
<http://www.childrenshospital.org>   examined 23 typical 10-year-old
readers with FMRI as they listened to rapid sound shifts common in
spoken language, which elicited activity from 11 distinct areas in the
children's brains. When 22 dyslexic readers of the same age took the
challenge, none of these areas showed any activity at all. "This was
a surprise," says lead researcher Nadine Gaab
<http://www.childrenshospital.org/cfapps/research/data_admin/Site2545/ma\
inpageS2545P0.html%20>  .



To activate the dysfunctional circuitry, the team had the dyslexic
children play video games designed to exercise brain centers associated
with rapid sound recognition. The results were dramatic: tests two
months later showed that all the dyslexic children reached parity with
normal readers in the critical areas of listening comprehension and word
recognition. Scores in other areas such as reading comprehension fell
short of those of normal readers but still represented a vast
improvement.



The improvement was also reflected in brain activity. Follow-up scans
showed increasing activity in the 11 areas associated with processing
sound. But will the fix stick? "That's a study that still needs
to be done," Gaab says.




Happy Learning,




Yovan P. Putra <http://primamind.blogspot.com>

www.primastudy.com <http://www.primastudy.com>


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