| Dyslexia
Not the Same in Every Culture.
Westerners
shudder at the idea of reading even the most basic street signs and instructions
in Chinese, a language with 6,000 characters to memorize.
A
new set of brain images shows why: Reading English-style alphabets and Chinese
characters use very different parts of the brain. The
results also suggest that Chinese schoolchildren with reading problems misfire
in a different brain region than the one used in reading alphabet-based languages
like English. This
demonstrates that the learning disorder dyslexia is not the same in every culture
and does not have a universal biological cause, researchers said. Neurologists
described the results as "very important and innovative." While
dyslexia has certain common roots, they said they now have some proof that this
kind of functional problem plays out differently according to the unique demands
that Western and Eastern languages place on the brain's wiring and processing
centers. And, it
suggests that treating dyslexia around the world probably will require different
therapies between nations and languages as well, they said. "We
should not be alphabet-centric in our thinking," said Georgetown University neuroscientist
Guinevere Eden. She has conducted brain scans on American dyslexic children, but
she did not participate in the study on Chinese students. "Reading
is complex," Eden said. "This shows we need to be more open-minded about diverse
treatment approaches." Dyslexia
is a common developmental disorder in which people of normal intelligence have
difficulty learning to read, spell and master other language skills. In the United
States, it is observed in 5 to 15% of the population, while in China it affects
up to 7%. Its origins
are complex. There appears to be an inherited genetic aspect. Researchers say
they expect that the same genes would be involved in dyslexics regardless of their
heritage. It also
may result from neural injury before birth that changes visual and auditory pathways
in the brain. Earlier
brain scans show that English-reading dyslexics misfire in the left temporal-parietal
region of the brain associated with awareness of phonemes, 44 sounds from the
English alphabet. It
is located in the middle and upper portions of the brain's left lobe. Similar
results were found with French and Italian dyslexics. "We
assumed that all dyslexics probably were the same," Eden said. "But reading Chinese
requires a different set of skills." And,
according to the new study, it uses some different parts of the brain called the
left middle frontal gyrus, or LMFG. Brain scans show the LMFG fires in normal
Chinese readers, but Chinese dyslexics show glitches in that circuitry, according
to Li-Hai Tan of the National Institute of Mental Health in Bethesda and the University
of Hong Kong. The
LMFG is located toward the left-front of the brain. It is associated with symbol
interpretation. Unlike alphabet letters, Chinese characters represent entire thoughts
and physical objects. Tan's
results appear in the latest issue of the journal Nature. In the experiment, the
researchers worked with 16 Beijing schoolchildren who are 10-12 years old. Eight
were dyslexic and the rest were normal readers. The children took turns being
placed in an MRI machine as sets of Chinese characters were flashed electronically
on a screen. They
saw the characters briefly and had to choose an answer by pressing a key with
their index finger. During the test, the MRI took snapshots of oxygen-rich blood
flowing to portions of their brains in action.
It does not mean Chinese dyslexics might be able to use different portions of
their brain and learn to read English signs and instructions more easily. Once
a person learns to read they tend to use the same circuitry regardless of the
second language and its alphabet, Eden said.
Original
article September 2004. With
many thanks to the highly recommended USATODAY.
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