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Acquired Dyslexia Essay Research Paper Acquired DyslexiaPresenters (стр. 2 из 2)

of evidence. More recently, however, two much more satisfactory pieces of evidence have emerged.

Patterson, Vargha-Khadem and Polkey (1987) report a study of a person who first exhibited signs of a

left-hemisphere abnormality at 13 and had a left hemispherectomy at age 15. Given her age, it is likely

that language development in the two hemispheres would have reached maturity. Prior to the onset of her

left-hemisphere symptoms she was a normal reader for her age. After her hemispherectomy she displayed

all the major symptoms of deep dyslexia:

Semantic errors (arm -> “finger”, pigeon -> “cockatoo”)

Visual errors (bush -> “brush”, frost -> “forest”)

Morphological errors (duck -> ducks”, smoke -> “smoking”)

Very poor reading of function words

Nonword reading impossible.

Michel, Henaff and Intrilligator (1996) report the case of a 23-year-old man who as a result of

neurosurgery was left with a lesion of the posterior half of the corpus callosum. He was able to resume his

college studies in accountancy after recovering from surgery. Michel et al studied his reading by briefly

presenting words to the left hemisphere (i.e. in the right visual hemifield) or the right hemisphere (left

visual hemifield), with these results:

Right visual hemifield: Words were read rapidly, and with 100% accuracy. Judgement of whether

two words rhymed or not was 94% accurate.

Left visual hemifield:

Numerous semantic errors such as bijou -> “perle”, poulet -> “garlic”.

Concrete words read better than abstract words.

Function words poorly read.

Nonword reading virtually impossible.

At chance on judging whether two words rhymed.

These two studies would seem to provide conclusive evidence for the right-hemisphere interpretation of

deep dyslexia.

Treatment

In deep dyslexia, the brain damage is extensive, the reading impairment is severe, and the patient is

aphasic as well as dyslexic. Nevertheless, the condition responds to appropriate and intensive treatment;

this has been demonstrated by de Partz (1986).

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