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Dyslexia, Learning, and the Brain: Understanding Cognitive Differences - MIT Press | Essential Reading for Educators, Parents & Researchers
Dyslexia, Learning, and the Brain: Understanding Cognitive Differences - MIT Press | Essential Reading for Educators, Parents & Researchers

Dyslexia, Learning, and the Brain: Understanding Cognitive Differences - MIT Press | Essential Reading for Educators, Parents & Researchers

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A unique overview of research on dyslexia and an account of the underlying causes at cognitive, brain, and neural system levels that provides a framework for significant progress in the understanding of dyslexia and other related learning disabilities.Dyslexia research has made dramatic progress since the mid-1980s. Once discounted as a “middle-class myth,” dyslexia is now the subject of a complex—and confusing—body of theoretical and empirical research. In Dyslexia, Learning, and the Brain, leading dyslexia researchers Roderick Nicolson and Angela Fawcett provide a uniquely broad and coherent analysis of dyslexia theory. Unlike most dyslexia research, which addresses the question “what is the cause of the reading disability called dyslexia?” the authors' work has addressed the deeper question of “what is the cause of the learning disability that manifests as reading problems?” This perspective allows them to place dyslexia research within the much broader disciplines of cognitive psychology and cognitive neuroscience and has led to a rich framework, including two established leading theories, the automatization deficit account (1990) and the cerebellar deficit hypothesis (2001). Nicolson and Fawcett show that extensive evidence has accumulated to support these two theories and that they may be seen as subsuming the established phonological deficit account and sensory processing accounts. Moving to the explanatory level of neural systems, they argue that all these disorders reflect problems in some component of the procedural learning system, a multiregion system including major components of cortical and subcortical regions. The authors' answer to the fundamental question “what is dyslexia?” offers a challenge and motivation for research throughout the learning disabilities, laying the foundations for future progress.

Reviews

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The authors of this slim, highly-readable, and informative volume are themselves researchers in this field. The major point of the book is to present their own comprehensive model of the cognitive underpinnings of reading disorders. In the process, they also cover previous theories and give a broad summary of the research to date.They should be commended for the structure of their book, which not only includes numbered section headings and summaries, but also forward references at the ends of chapters to connect the material just covered to material in later chapters. Their theoretical model and extensive research on that model appeared to me to be useful for both researchers and clinicians. For those in the field, they attempt to go beyond the phonological-processing model and the dual-deficit model (phonological processing plus speed of processing), to present an integrated model of how problems with automatizing many tasks, including motor skills, may lead to most of the problems observed in reading disability.Those who work with learning disabled children and adults will find this a lucid, comprehensive, and current update on the state of research in this complex area. Some family members or other interested non-professionals may also find it interesting or enlightening (although it is primarily aimed at professional psychologists and specialists in learning disabilities), because it is so well written.
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