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July 25, 2003|Volume 31, Number 33|Five-Week Issue



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Study: Environment plays role
in some reading disabilities

Yale researchers have, for the first time, identified two types of reading disability -- one primarily inherent, the other more environmentally influenced.

The findings, published in the July 1 issue of Biological Psychiatry, show that the first type (poor readers who compensate for their disability) have a higher cognitive ability that helps them to improve their ability to read words accurately and to understand what they read. In contrast, the other type (persistently poor readers) continue to experience difficulties; as children, these readers had lower cognitive ability and more often attended disadvantaged schools.

"These findings indicate the important role of experience in the proper development of the neural systems for reading and offer hope for teaching our most disadvantaged children how to read," says principal investigator Dr. Sally Shaywitz, professor of pediatrics at the School of Medicine and co-director of the National Institutes of Health Yale Center for the Study of Learning and Attention.

Shaywitz says the study resolves a major question in reading disability -- why some children compensate for their reading difficulties, while others continue to struggle to read. The researchers found that brain activation patterns show a disruption in the neural systems for reading in compensated readers, while the neural circuitry for reading real words is present in persistently poor readers, but has not been properly activated.

"Reading is the most important work of childhood and yet, as many as one in five children struggle to learn to read, with consequences extending beyond childhood into adult life," says Shaywitz. "The discovery that the neural systems for reading are intact in our most disadvantaged and most persistently poor readers has important educational implications and is of special relevance for teaching children to read."

She adds: "Children need to be able to sound out words in order to decode them accurately and then, they need to know the meaning of the word to help them decode and comprehend the printed message. Our results show that providing early interventions aimed at stimulating both the ability to sound out words and to understand word meanings would be beneficial in children at risk for reading difficulties associated with disadvantage."

Shaywitz and her team used functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) to examine brain activation patterns in two groups of young adults who were poor readers as children and have been part of the Connecticut Longitudinal study since 1983 when they were 5-year-olds. Compensated poor readers made up one group; persistently poor readers were a second group; and a third group of children who were always good readers served as controls.

The children in the study had their reading assessed yearly throughout their primary and secondary schooling. Poor readers were identified by word reading tests in second grade; by ninth grade, some children had improved in reading accuracy (compensated poor readers) while others continued to be poor readers in ninth grade (persistently poor readers).

The study also examined early environmental factors that might account for their different brain imaging patterns and outcomes between the compensated readers and the persistently poor readers.

"These findings are exciting because they suggest with early stimulation these already present neural systems for reading could be connected properly and allow children to become good readers," says Shaywitz. "They emphasize the importance of the environment and, particularly, of teaching."

Other authors on the study included Dr. Bennett Shaywitz, Dr. Robert Fulbright, Pawel Skudlarski, Einar Mencl, Todd Constable, Ken Pugh, John Holahan, Karen Marchione, Jack Fletcher, Reid Lyon and John Gore.The study was funded by the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development.

-- By Karen Peart


T H I SW E E K ' SS T O R I E S

The answer is: 'Jeopardy!'

Yale students get lesson in organic farming

Gift to help create police station/community center

Study: Environment plays role in some reading disabilities

Works from Yale collection on view at the Met

Compounds being developed to treat infectious disease

IN FOCUS: Community Rowing Program

MEDICAL SCHOOL NEWS

Beinecke Library to celebrate women in the arts

Pilot Pen tournament features tennis and much more

Meg Bellinger joins Yale staff as associate librarian

Dr. Robert Donaldson, former medical deputy dean, dies

Recent graduates win honors in international design competition

Mystery, humor, tragedy -- Yale Rep's new season has them all

Three journalists will enhance their legal reporting as Knight Fellows

Globalization's impact on health, gender explored

Welcome to the future

Search Committee Named for Beinecke Library Director

YUWO scholarships to help 11 Yale affiliates further their education

Campus Notes


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