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Reading and dyslexia Jason D. Zevin, PhD Assistant Professor of Psychology in Psychiatry [email protected]

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Page 1: Reading and dyslexia Jason D. Zevin, PhD Assistant Professor of Psychology in Psychiatry jdz2001@med.cornell.edu

Reading and dyslexia

Jason D. Zevin, PhDAssistant Professor of Psychology in

[email protected]

Page 2: Reading and dyslexia Jason D. Zevin, PhD Assistant Professor of Psychology in Psychiatry jdz2001@med.cornell.edu

What is reading?

What can go wrong with reading?

What do we know about the brain basis of reading?

Page 3: Reading and dyslexia Jason D. Zevin, PhD Assistant Professor of Psychology in Psychiatry jdz2001@med.cornell.edu

What is reading?

What can go wrong with reading?

What do we know about the brain basis of reading?

Page 4: Reading and dyslexia Jason D. Zevin, PhD Assistant Professor of Psychology in Psychiatry jdz2001@med.cornell.edu

Let’s read some words out loud together. Just say them out loud as they come up on the screen…

Page 5: Reading and dyslexia Jason D. Zevin, PhD Assistant Professor of Psychology in Psychiatry jdz2001@med.cornell.edu

HINT

Page 6: Reading and dyslexia Jason D. Zevin, PhD Assistant Professor of Psychology in Psychiatry jdz2001@med.cornell.edu

MINT

Page 7: Reading and dyslexia Jason D. Zevin, PhD Assistant Professor of Psychology in Psychiatry jdz2001@med.cornell.edu

PINT

Page 8: Reading and dyslexia Jason D. Zevin, PhD Assistant Professor of Psychology in Psychiatry jdz2001@med.cornell.edu

HORS D’OEUVRES

Page 9: Reading and dyslexia Jason D. Zevin, PhD Assistant Professor of Psychology in Psychiatry jdz2001@med.cornell.edu

What happened there?

There are (at least) two ways to read a word.

- You can figure out how it’s pronounced based on “rules.”

- You can remember how it’s pronounced because you’ve learned it before.

Page 10: Reading and dyslexia Jason D. Zevin, PhD Assistant Professor of Psychology in Psychiatry jdz2001@med.cornell.edu

Coltheart et al., 2001, Psych Review

PINT

P as in PITI as in ITN as in NAPT as in TIE

is pronounced with a ‘long I’

A historically important model is based on more or less this intuition…

Page 11: Reading and dyslexia Jason D. Zevin, PhD Assistant Professor of Psychology in Psychiatry jdz2001@med.cornell.edu

English is quirky

Page 12: Reading and dyslexia Jason D. Zevin, PhD Assistant Professor of Psychology in Psychiatry jdz2001@med.cornell.edu

What is reading?

What can go wrong with reading?

What do we know about the brain basis of reading?

Page 13: Reading and dyslexia Jason D. Zevin, PhD Assistant Professor of Psychology in Psychiatry jdz2001@med.cornell.edu

Marshall & Newcombe, 1973

PHASE -> FACEREAPPLY -> REPLYDEVOUR -> “DAVER”

(but also):GAUGE -> JUGGOAL -> GOLDLOGIC -> LUGUS

Page 14: Reading and dyslexia Jason D. Zevin, PhD Assistant Professor of Psychology in Psychiatry jdz2001@med.cornell.edu

SICK -> ILLLARGE -> BIGBERRY -> GRAPES

(but also):SYMPATHY -> ORCHESTRARESIGN -> CROWNFREQUENT -> “um, something to do with trains, wagon train…SLOW” (?!)

Page 15: Reading and dyslexia Jason D. Zevin, PhD Assistant Professor of Psychology in Psychiatry jdz2001@med.cornell.edu

Summary of a large number of cases by Crisp & Lambon Ralph, 2006

Page 16: Reading and dyslexia Jason D. Zevin, PhD Assistant Professor of Psychology in Psychiatry jdz2001@med.cornell.edu

An alternative perspective…

Page 17: Reading and dyslexia Jason D. Zevin, PhD Assistant Professor of Psychology in Psychiatry jdz2001@med.cornell.edu

Consider:

Phonological dyslexics typically have more general phonological problems.

Page 18: Reading and dyslexia Jason D. Zevin, PhD Assistant Professor of Psychology in Psychiatry jdz2001@med.cornell.edu
Page 19: Reading and dyslexia Jason D. Zevin, PhD Assistant Professor of Psychology in Psychiatry jdz2001@med.cornell.edu

Consider:

Woollams et al., 2010 (Psych Review)

There is a strong association between “exception word” reading and general semantic abilities.

Page 20: Reading and dyslexia Jason D. Zevin, PhD Assistant Professor of Psychology in Psychiatry jdz2001@med.cornell.edu
Page 21: Reading and dyslexia Jason D. Zevin, PhD Assistant Professor of Psychology in Psychiatry jdz2001@med.cornell.edu

What is reading?

What can go wrong with reading?

What do we know about the brain basis of reading?

Page 22: Reading and dyslexia Jason D. Zevin, PhD Assistant Professor of Psychology in Psychiatry jdz2001@med.cornell.edu

Turkeltaub et al., 2002, meta-analysis of 11 studies

Page 23: Reading and dyslexia Jason D. Zevin, PhD Assistant Professor of Psychology in Psychiatry jdz2001@med.cornell.edu

Richlan et al., 2009, Human Brain Mapping (meta-analysis of 17 studies of developmental dyslexia)

Page 24: Reading and dyslexia Jason D. Zevin, PhD Assistant Professor of Psychology in Psychiatry jdz2001@med.cornell.edu

Some take-away points

Reading is complicated.* The brain is complicated.So it’s difficult to reverse-engineer cognitive processes from complex ramifications of brain lesions.

Luckily, we have brain imaging. (So we can see that really an awful lot of the brain is involved in reading.)

The puzzle is trying to fit our cognitive models (which work pretty well) together with what we know about the brain.

*So far we’ve mainly been talking about single words!!

Page 25: Reading and dyslexia Jason D. Zevin, PhD Assistant Professor of Psychology in Psychiatry jdz2001@med.cornell.edu