1 / 22

Perception and Dyslexia Mr Patrick Mulcahy, Chair ASASA

Perception and Dyslexia Mr Patrick Mulcahy, Chair ASASA. Perception is the process of acquiring, interpreting, selecting, and organising sensory information Brain is the organ of perception Neurological processing underlies our perception. Perception.

allan
Télécharger la présentation

Perception and Dyslexia Mr Patrick Mulcahy, Chair ASASA

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Perception and DyslexiaMr Patrick Mulcahy, Chair ASASA • Perception is the process of acquiring, interpreting, selecting, and organising sensory information • Brain is the organ of perception • Neurological processing underlies our perception

  2. Perception • Darwinian natural selection over countless generations has shaped our sense organs. • They have been shaped to give us a useful picture of the world, to help us to survive. • What sense organs do is to construct a useful model of the world…a kind of virtual reality simulation of the real world. • Very difficult to free oneself from the shackles of pre-conception and ‘common sense’.

  3. Perception • If reality was represented as the keys on a piano, human perception would be limited to a single chord

  4. Developmental Dyslexia • Professor John Stein, Magdalen College, Oxford, states that ‘dyslexia has an organic neurological basis and, contrary to previous strongly held beliefs, it is not 'purely psychological’ • Professor Stein sees a definite correlation with abnormal magnocellular neurones

  5. Magnocellular Region Correlation with Dyslexia: Sound and vision being processed differently in this one area of the brain with tasks involving literacy

  6. There are two partially independent mechanisms for reading: phonological and visual.

  7. Reading and Perception • Saying the colours rather than reading the words demonstrates the separate processes

  8. The Phonological Model • The phonological model of dyslexia defines it in terms of difficulties associated with converting phonemes (‘smallest meaningful segment of language’) into symbols (letters). • The mental activity associated with reading can be divided into word identification, phonological processing, and cognitive reasoning. • A deficit in phonological processing will reduce a person’s ability to convert symbols into sounds (reading) and/or sounds into symbols (writing) thus preventing them from exhibiting their true cognitive ability.

  9. READING • Different combinations of 44 phonemes produce every word in the English language as with the example used above i.e. • CAT = ‘Kuh’, ‘aah’ and ‘tuh’. • Before words can be identified, understood, stored in memory or retrieved from it they must first be broken down or parsed, into their phonetic units by the phonological module of the brain. • There is no overt clue to the underlying segmental nature of speech and speech appears seamless, i.e. an oscilloscope would register the word ‘cat’ as a single burst of sound

  10. READING AND DYSLEXIA • Reading is not natural as it is a human invention which must be learned at a conscious level. A child has to learn that orthography (the sequence of letters on the page) represents the phonology. This is what occurs when a child learns to read. • When a child has dyslexia, a deficit within the language system of the phonological module impairs his/her ability to segment the written word into its underlying phonological components. The deficit in phonological can prevent word identification.

  11. READING AND DYSLEXIA • Difficulties with rote memorisation; • Difficulties with rapid word retrieval; • Difficulties with reading – decoding words automatically can be difficult and the additional energy consumed on this tends to lessen comprehension i.e. students with dyslexia rely more on context when reading and this slows them down; • Spelling difficulties can be similarly accounted for as the same process is used when converting sounds into symbols (writing); • The additional work required by the brain to decode symbols can result in tiredness and concentration can consequently suffer

  12. VISION AND DYSLEXIA

  13. VISION AND DYSLEXIA Reading requires a series of eye fixations and saccades to the next word.

  14. How could a visual magnocellular deficit cause reading problems? • The magnocellular deficit in dyslexics is mild. • Hence letters appear to move around and their order becomes confused

  15. Magnocellular processing sharpens:

  16. into:

  17. SYMPTOMS OF VISUAL DYSLEXIA

  18. THE NEUROLOGICAL EFFECTS OF DYSLEXIA • Difference in the area of the brain affecting visual and phonological processing • The net result of this is that their perception of literacy will be different.

  19. Student with Dyslexia Non-Dyslexic Student Brain Mapping reveals that people with dyslexia rely on different parts of the brain when reading and writing.

  20. The Needs of Students with Dyslexia • Context is Higher Education • Research, Composition, Proofreading, Note-taking and Time Management • Teaching is Lecture-based

  21. The Needs of Students with Dyslexia • Students with Auditory Sequential Working Memory and Visual Memory Deficits need Different teaching and Learning strategies

More Related