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Brains of dyslexics are different

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Scientists find that dyslexic brains work differently than others.
Scientists find that dyslexic brains work differently than others.

Dyslexia, the most commonly diagnosed learning disorder in the United States, causes problems with reading and writing.

Previous research showed that brain activity is disrupted in people with dyslexia, but most of those studies focused only on a small number of brain regions.

Functional connectivity

This new study used functional MRI to analyse how multiple brain regions use networks to communicate with each other, something called functional connectivity.

Read: Dyslexia: the broken link

The researchers scanned and compared the brains of children and adults with and without dyslexia, and found that the two groups had many differences in the connections between different brain regions.

People with dyslexia had less connectivity between a number of brain regions involved in reading, according to the study released in the online journal Biological Psychiatry.

"As far as we know, this is one of the first studies of dyslexia to examine differences in functional connectivity across the whole brain, shedding light on the brain networks that crucially support the complex task of reading," study author Emily Finn, a neuroscience Ph.D. student at Yale University School of Medicine, said in a news release.

Read: Know the signs of dyslexia

"Compared to typical readers, dyslexics had weaker connections between areas that process visual information and areas that control attention, suggesting that individuals with dyslexia are less able to focus on printed words," she explained.

Read More:

E-readers benefit some with dyslexia
Brain connections may explain dyslexia
Brain anatomy in dyslexics varies by gender

Image: Dyslexia spelled backwards using building blocks from Shutterstock

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