Dyslexia - cultural differences or universal origin?
In this paper, we attempt to address and reconcile the differences between the apparent incompatibility between behavioural and neuroimaging findings in the field of dyslexia. Specifically, we examined research findings on the similarities and differences in the manifestation of various deficits sho...
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sg-ntu-dr.10356-525382019-12-10T14:51:43Z Dyslexia - cultural differences or universal origin? Lim, Kai Lynn. Tay, Qin Yue. Chong, Claudia Pick Yee. School of Humanities and Social Sciences Cao Fan DRNTU::Humanities In this paper, we attempt to address and reconcile the differences between the apparent incompatibility between behavioural and neuroimaging findings in the field of dyslexia. Specifically, we examined research findings on the similarities and differences in the manifestation of various deficits shown by readers from different cultures. This then led us to explore the neurological basis of dyslexia. While it first appears that the underlying neurological basis of dyslexia is non-universal as evident by research findings indicating different activations of brain regions for dyslexics from different cultures, recent findings have provided strong evidence that these inconsistent findings may be due to methodological differences and that dyslexia does have a universal neurological basis. This suggests that the differences in the behavioural symptoms of dyslexic readers from different cultures are not due to neurological differences but can possibly be attributed to the different characteristics of individual language system. In other words, as normal readers from different cultures are able to specialize in their culture’s language systems, they show different brain activations. On the other hand, dyslexic readers are unable to specialize in their own language systems and therefore, they share common brain activations. In sum, dyslexia is manifested in different behavioural forms across different cultures only because each language system has its own unique characteristics. More importantly, a review of current literature has led us to conclude that the underlying basis of dyslexia has a universal neurological origin. Bachelor of Arts 2013-05-16T09:20:33Z 2013-05-16T09:20:33Z 2013 2013 Final Year Project (FYP) http://hdl.handle.net/10356/52538 en Nanyang Technological University 49 p. application/pdf |
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DRNTU::Humanities Lim, Kai Lynn. Tay, Qin Yue. Chong, Claudia Pick Yee. Dyslexia - cultural differences or universal origin? |
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In this paper, we attempt to address and reconcile the differences between the apparent incompatibility between behavioural and neuroimaging findings in the field of dyslexia. Specifically, we examined research findings on the similarities and differences in the manifestation of various deficits shown by readers from different cultures. This then led us to explore the neurological basis of dyslexia. While it first appears that the underlying neurological basis of dyslexia is non-universal as evident by research findings indicating different activations of brain regions for dyslexics from different cultures, recent findings have provided strong evidence that these inconsistent findings may be due to methodological differences and that dyslexia does have a universal neurological basis. This suggests that the differences in the behavioural symptoms of dyslexic readers from different cultures are not due to neurological differences but can possibly be attributed to the different characteristics of individual language system. In other words, as normal readers from different cultures are able to specialize in their culture’s language systems, they show different brain activations. On the other hand, dyslexic readers are unable to specialize in their own language systems and therefore, they share common brain activations. In sum, dyslexia is manifested in different behavioural forms across different cultures only because each language system has its own unique characteristics. More importantly, a review of current literature has led us to conclude that the underlying basis of dyslexia has a universal neurological origin. |
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School of Humanities and Social Sciences |
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School of Humanities and Social Sciences Lim, Kai Lynn. Tay, Qin Yue. Chong, Claudia Pick Yee. |
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Final Year Project |
author |
Lim, Kai Lynn. Tay, Qin Yue. Chong, Claudia Pick Yee. |
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Lim, Kai Lynn. |
title |
Dyslexia - cultural differences or universal origin? |
title_short |
Dyslexia - cultural differences or universal origin? |
title_full |
Dyslexia - cultural differences or universal origin? |
title_fullStr |
Dyslexia - cultural differences or universal origin? |
title_full_unstemmed |
Dyslexia - cultural differences or universal origin? |
title_sort |
dyslexia - cultural differences or universal origin? |
publishDate |
2013 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/10356/52538 |
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1681046938148929536 |