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Dyslexia gets a break in Italy.


Although people with the reading and language disorder language disorder Speech pathology Any defect in verbal communication and the ability to use or understand the symbol system for interpersonal communication. See Dyslexia.  known as dyslexia dyslexia (dĭslĕk`sēə), in psychology, a developmental disability in reading or spelling, generally becoming evident in early schooling. To a dyslexic, letters and words may appear reversed, e.g.  exhibit a common disruption of brain activity, their performance on reading tests varies greatly from one country to another, according to according to
prep.
1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians.

2. In keeping with: according to instructions.

3.
 a report in the March 16 SCIENCE.

There's a simple reason why individuals with dyslexia read better in certain countries, according to neuroscientist Eraldo Paulesu of the University of Milan Bicocca Coordinates:  The University of Milano - Bicocca was officially created in 1998, but did not at that time have an officially nominated teaching staff.  in Italy and his coworkers. Those who read languages such as Italian--in which specific letter combinations almost always stand for the same sounds--have the advantage over those who read languages with less-consistent spelling rules.

In English and French, for example, the same letters often have several associated sounds (as in mint and pint or cent and cat in English) or different letters for the same sounds (as in au temps and autant in French). For dyslexics, such languages are obstacle courses of spelling irregularities.

In another part of their study, Paulesu and his coworkers used positron emission tomography scanners Noun 1. positron emission tomography scanner - a tomograph that produces cross-sectional X-rays of metabolic processes in the body
PET scanner

tomograph - X-ray machine in which a computer builds a detailed image of a particular plane through an object from
 to measure blood-flow changes in the brains of 72 adults as they read real and nonsense words in their native languages. Equal numbers of volunteers came from England, France, and Italy. Half from each country had dyslexia.

All dyslexic dys·lex·ic or dys·lec·tic
adj.
Of or relating to dyslexia.

n.
A person affected by dyslexia.
 readers exhibited the same pattern of reduced left-brain activity, as indicated by drops in blood flow in that part of the brain. Despite this evidence for a common neurological flaw in dyslexia, however, those from Italy scored much higher than their European counterparts on a reading test.
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Title Annotation:better performance on reading tests linked to the simpler language
Author:B.B.
Publication:Science News
Article Type:Brief Article
Geographic Code:4EUIT
Date:Mar 31, 2001
Words:248
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