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Predicting Learning Ability of Dyslexics

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STANFORD, Calif., Dec. 22, 2010 — Researchers at the Stanford University School of Medicine have used sophisticated brain imaging to predict with 90 percent accuracy which teenagers with dyslexia would improve their reading skills over time. The research, which is the first to identify specific brain mechanisms involved in a person's ability to overcome reading difficulties, could lead to new interventions to help dyslexics better learn to read. "This gives us hope that we can identify which children might get better over time," said Fumiko Hoeft, an imaging expert and instructor at the university’s Center for...Read full article

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    Published: December 2010
    Allan ReissAmericasBiophotonicsbrain imagingCenter for Interdisciplinary Brain Sciences Researchdiffusion tensor imagingdyslexiaenergyfMRIfrontal lobeFumiko Hoeftfunctional magnetic resonance imagingGary GloverImaginginferior frontal gyrusJohn GabrieliNational Institute of Child Health and Human DevelopmentneuroprognosisProceedings of the National Academy of Sciencesreading skillsResearch & TechnologyStanford UniversityUniversity of JyväskyläUniversity of YorkVanderbilt University

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