Dyslexia affects different
parts
of children's brains depending on language, study shows
By Randolph E. Schmid ,
Associated Press
Dyslexia affects different
parts of children's brains depending on whether they are
raised reading English or Chinese. That finding,
reported in [the April 7] online edition of Proceedings
of the National Academy of Sciences, means that
therapists may need to seek different methods of
assisting dyslexic children from different cultures.
"This finding was very
surprising to us. We had not ever thought that
dyslexics' brains are different for children who read in
English and Chinese," said lead author Li-Hai Tan, a
professor of linguistics and brain and cognitive
sciences at the University of Hong Kong. "Our finding
yields neurobiological clues to the cause of dyslexia."
Millions of children worldwide
are affected by dyslexia, a language-based learning
disability that can include problems in reading,
spelling, writing and pronouncing words. The
International Dyslexia Association says there is no
consensus on the exact number because not all children
are screened, but estimates range from 8 percent to 15
percent of students.
Reading an alphabetic language
like English requires different skills than reading
Chinese, which relies less on sound representation,
instead using symbols to represent words.
Past studies have suggested
that the brain may use different networks of neurons in
different languages, but none has suggested a difference
in the structural parts of the brain involved, Tan
explained.
Tan's research group studied
the brains of students raised reading Chinese, using
functional magnetic resonance imaging. They then
compared those findings with similar studies of the
brains of students raised reading English.
Guinevere F. Eden, director of
the Center for the Study of Learning at Georgetown
University in Washington, said the process of becoming a
skilled reader changes the brain.
"Becoming a reader is a fairly
dramatic process for the brain," explained Eden, who was
not part of Tan's research team on this paper.
For children, learning to read
is culturally important but is not really natural, Eden
said, so when the brain orients toward a different
writing system it copes with it differently.
For example, English-speaking
children learn the sounds of letters and how to combine
them into words, while Chinese youngsters memorize
hundreds of symbols which represent words.
"The implication here is that
when we see a reading disability, we see it in different
parts of the brain depending on the writing system that
the child is born into," Eden said.
That means, "we cannot just
assume that any dyslexic child is going to be helped by
the same kind of intervention," she said in a telephone
interview.
Tan said the new findings
suggest that treating Chinese speakers with dyslexia may
use working memory tasks and tests relating to
sensor-motor skills, while current treatments of English
dyslexia focus on letter-sound conversions and sound
awareness.
He said the underlying cause
of brain structure abnormalities in dyslexia is
currently unknown.
"Previous genetic studies
suggest that malformations of brain development are
associated with mutations of several genes and that
developmental dyslexia has a genetic basis," he said in
an interview via e-mail.
"We speculate that different
genes may be involved in dyslexia in Chinese and English
readers. In this respect, our brain-mapping findings can
assist in the search for candidate genes that cause
dyslexia," Tan said.
In their paper, the
researchers noted that imaging studies of the brains of
dyslexic children using alphabetic languages like
English have identified unusual function and structure
in the left temporo-parietal areas, thought to be
involved in letter-to-sound conversions in reading; left
middle-superior temporal cortex, thought to be involved
in speech sound analysis, and the left inferior temporo-occipital
gyrus, which may function as a quick word-form
recognition system.
When they performed similar
imaging studies on dyslexic Chinese youngsters, on the
other hand, they found disruption in a different area,
the left middle frontal gyrus region.
The study was funded by the
Ministry of Science and Technology of China, the Hong
Kong Research Grants Council and the University of Hong
Kong.
In a separate paper, published
two years ago, University of Michigan researchers
reported that Asians and North Americans see the world
differently.
Shown a photograph, North
American students of European background paid more
attention to the object in the foreground of a scene,
while students from China spent more time studying the
background and taking in the whole scene.
Source: Associated Press