Dyslexia
Dyslexia is a very broad term defining a learning disability
that impairs a person's fluency or comprehension accuracy in being able to
read, and which can manifest itself as a difficulty with phonological awareness,
phonological decoding, processing speed, orthographic coding, auditory short-term memory, language
skills/verbal comprehension, and/or rapid naming.
Dyslexia is distinct from reading difficulties resulting from other causes,
such as a non-neurological deficiency with vision or hearing, or from poor or
inadequate instruction. It is believed that dyslexia
can affect between 5 and 10 percent of a given population although there have
been no studies to indicate an accurate percentage.
There are three proposed cognitive subtypes of dyslexia (auditory, visual
and attentional), although individual cases of dyslexia are better explained by
specific underlying neuropsychological deficits and co-occurring learning
disabilities (e.g. attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder, math disability,
etc.Reading disability, or dyslexia, is the most common learning disability.
Although it is considered to be a receptive language-based learning disability
in the research literature, dyslexia also affects one's expressive language
skills. Researchers at found that people
with dyslexia exhibited impaired voice-recognition abilities
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