|
|
What the brain thinks while reading If men and women sometimes seem like they come from different planets, the difference in how their brains go about reading may help explain just how far apart those planets are. Husband-and-wife team
The Shaywitzs' finding was in fact a byproduct of a much larger investigation of reading and language usage designed to identify neurological differences in the brains of non-impaired readers and those with dyslexia. "We're developing a much more in-depth picture of how the brain works in non-impaired readers and people with reading difficulties," says Robert K. Fulbright, M.D., director of clinical fMRI and a collaborator with the Shaywitzs. Use of language for reading is an enormously complex mental activity involving motor-speech areas and language reception regions in the brain. Investigators ask study subjects to sound out nonsense words projected on a screen that is reflected to them while they undergo functional imaging. Areas of activation are then overlapped with anatomical scans. The results of each subject are "averaged" out to create a common brain space to account for individual differences in size and anatomy. The researchers are analyzing the data to determine differences between non-impaired readers and those with disabilities. Eventually, clinicians will diagnose children with various learning disabilities early on and begin treatment to prevent a lifetime of difficulties. "Reading disability is a circumscribed deficit surrounded by strengths," says Dr. Sally Shaywitz, professor of pediatrics and a faculty member in the Child Study Center. [Bennett Shaywitz is a professor with appointments in pediatrics, neurology and the Child Study Center.] "You need to identify those strengths, make the child aware of those strengths, and then maximize them to help overcome the disability." < back | top of page | next > Originally published in Yale Medicine, Winter/Spring 1998. Copyright © 1998 Yale University School of Medicine. All rights reserved. |