National Institutes of Health
National Institute of Child
Health and Human Development (NICHD)
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE Monday, April 19, 2004
CONTACT:
Robert Bock or Marianne Glass Duffy 301-496-5133
Imaging Study Reveals Brain Function of Poor Readers
Can Improve
A brain imaging study has shown that, after
they overcome their reading disability, the brains of formerly poor readers begin to function like the brains of good readers,
showing increased activity in a part of the brain that recognizes words. The study appears in the May 1 Biological Psychiatry
and was funded by the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (NICHD), one of the National Institutes
of Health.
.
"These images show that effective reading instruction
not only improves reading ability, but actually changes the brain's functioning so that it can perform reading tasks more
efficiently," said Duane Alexander, MD., Director of the NICHD.
The research team was led by Bennett Shaywitz, M.D., and
Sally Shaywitz, MD, of Yale University,
in New Haven, Connecticut.
Other authors of the study were trom Syracuse University,
in Syracuse, New York; Vanderbilt
University, in Nashville, Tennessee; and the NICHD.
According to Dr. Sally Shaywitz, the results
show that "Teaching matters and good teaching can change the brain in a way that has the potential to benefit struggling readers."
Along with testing the children's reading ability,
the researchers used functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRl), a sophisticated brain imaging technology, to observe the
children's brain functioning as they read.
In all,. 77 children between the ages of 6 and about
9 and ½ took part in the study. of these, 49 had difficulty reading,
and 29 children were good readers. of the 49 poor readers, 12 received the standard instruction in reading that was
available through their school systems. The remaining 37 were enrolled in an intensive reading program based on instruction
in phonemic awareness and phonics.
In the study, the 37 poor readers in the intensive reading
program outpaced the 12 poor readers in the standard instruction groups, making strong gains in three measures of reading
skill: accuracy, fluency, and comprehension. These gains were still apparent when the children were tested again a year later.
Moreover, fMRI scans showed that the brains of the 37 formerly poor readers began functioning like the brains of
good readers. Specifically, the poor readers showed increased activity in an area of the brain that recognizes
words instantly without first having to decipher them.
The intensive reading program the 37 children took had
strong components in phonemic awareness and phonics. Phonemic awareness refers to the ability to identify phonemes, the individual
sounds that make up spoken words. The word "bag," for example, is made up of three such elemental units of speech,
which can be represented as bbb, aaa, and ggg. The brain strings together the 40 phonemes making up the English language to
produce hundreds and thousands of words. In speech, this process is unconscious and automatic.
'_.
Beginning in the 1970s, NICHD-funded researchers learned
that developing a conscious awareness of the smaller sounds in words was essential to mastering the next step in learning
to read, phonics. Phonics refers to the ability to match spoken phonemes to the individual letters of the alphabet
that represent them. Once children master phonics, the NICHD-funded studies showed, they could make sense of words
they haven't seen before, without first having to memorize them. Further NICHD-supported research found that instruction in
phonemic awareness was an essential part of a comprehensive program in
reading instruction that could help most poor readers overcome their disability.
In the 1990s, the Shaywitzes had used fMRI to learn that
reading ability resides in the brain's left half, or hemisphere. Within the hemisphere, three brain regions work together
to control reading. In the left front of the brain, one area recognizes phonemes. Further back, another brain area "maps"
phonemes to the letters that represent them. Still another brain area serves as a kind of long-term storage system. Once a
word is learned, this brain region recognizes it automatically, without first having to decipher it phonetically.
Poor readers, the researchers had learned in the earlier
studies, have difficulty accessing this automatic recognition center. Instead, they rely almost exclusively on the phoneme
center and the mapping center. Each time poor readers see a word, they must puzzle over it, as if they were seeing it for
the first time.
In the current study, the researchers discovered that,
as the 37 poor readers progressed through their instruction program, their brains began to function more like the brains of
good readers. Specifically, the brains of these children showed increased activation in the automatic recognition center.
. "This study represents the fruition of decades of NICHD-supported reading research," said G. Reid Lyon, Ph.D, Chief
of NICHD's Child Development and Behavior Branch. "The findings show that
the brain systems involved in reading respond to effective reading instruction."
The NICHD is part of the National Institutes of Health
(NIB), the biomedical research arm of the federal government. NIH is an agency of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. The NICHD sponsors research on development,
before and after birth; maternal, child, and family health; reproductive biology and population issues; and medical rehabilitation.
NICHD publications, as well as information about the Institute, are available from the NICHD Web site, http://www.nichdnih.gov.
or from the NICHD Information
Resource Center, 1-800-370-2943;
e-mail NICHDInformationResourceCenter@mail.nih.gov.