作者BroodWar (怒火燎原)
看板TTU-AFL
標題[語言] Dyslexia in different languages
時間Wed Oct 14 14:36:43 2009
Dyslexia in different languages
Dyslexia may manifest itself differently for speakers of different languages,
according to a study published online in the October 12 issue of Current
Biology. Using visual and audio tests, as well as functional magnetic
resonance imaging (fMRI) brain scans, researchers from the University of Hong
Kong determined that, while dyslexia in English-speakers is primarily due to
a sound-related processing problem, among Chinese language speakers, it is
likely driven by both visual and sound processing disorders.
Dyslexia among English-speakers is generally attributed to the presence of a
phonological disorder—or the struggle to separate and keep track of
specific, individual sounds. Very broadly, this leading theory holds that
dyslexics have trouble with the written word as an extension of their
struggle to innately process phonemes, or snippets of verbal language. (When
asked to decouple the "r" sound from the word "rock," dyslexic children would
struggle significantly more than non-dyslexic children, for example.) As a
result, dyslexics get tangled up during reading because the process requires
them to connect the phonics—or specific utterances associated with written
letters or groups of letters—to the phonesemes.
Yet, whereas in English readers can use letters to sound words out,
pronunciation of specific characters in Chinese languages is dependent on
rote memorization, the researchers point out. And knowing which character's
pronunciation to pull up is dependent on a complete understanding of the
intricate combination of strokes included in each character. In the analysis
of 12 Chinese children with dyslexia, researchers found that, in addition to
struggling with phonological processing exercises, the children also had
trouble with exercises in which they were asked to judge the dimensions of
images, as compared with non-dyslexic children. What's more, while performing
visual identification tasks, brain scans revealed that dyslexics had less
activity in the part of the brain associated with visuospatial processing, as
compared with non-dyslexics.
The findings, the researchers say, suggest that dyslexia among Chinese
language speakers may be more complex and multifaceted than that of English
speakers. Or, as they put it, "[D]evelopmental dyslexia in Chinese is
typically characterized by the co-existence of visuospatial and phonological
disorders..." In English, however, it "is generally associated with a core
phonological deficit in the absence of abnormal visual processing."
Read more:
http://wellness.blogs.time.com/2009/10/13/dyslexia-in-different-languages/#ixzz0Tp0fAnUh
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