Research
- Team members
- The phonological deficit
- Genetics
- Social cognition
- Theories of dyslexia
- Language acquisition
Funding | Participants |
|---|---|
| European Commission Medical Research Council | Uta Frith, Stuart Rosen, and other collaborators from University College London. Sarah White, Elizabeth Milne, Elizabeth Pidgeon, and other students and research assistants. |
During my postdoc as a Marie Curie fellow at University College London in 2000-2001, in collaboration with Uta Frith, Stuart Rosen and others, I have attempted to produce decisive data that might allow us to adjudicate between competing theories of developmental dyslexia (phonological, auditory/temporal processing, visual/magnocellular, motor/cerebellar...). Our initial results on dyslexic adults favoured the idea that sensorimotor disorders are present in only a fraction of dyslexics, and that a specific phonological deficit seems sufficient to cause dyslexia:
Ramus,
F., Rosen, S.,
Dakin, S. C., Day, B. L.,
Castellote,
J. M., White, S., & Frith, U. (2003). Theories of developmental
dyslexia:
Insights from a multiple case study of dyslexic adults. Brain,
126,
841-865.
(supplementary
material)
This work has been extended by graduate students Liz Pidgeon and Sarah White in related studies, leading to similar conclusions:
Ramus,
F., Pidgeon, E.,
& Frith, U. (2003). The
relationship
between motor control and phonology in dyslexic children.
Journal of
Child Psychology and Psychiatry, 44 (5), 712-722. ![]()
White,
S.,
Milne, E., Rosen,
S., Hansen, P. C., Swettenham, J., Frith, U., & Ramus, F.
(2006).
The role of sensorimotor impairments in dyslexia: A multiple case study
of dyslexic children. Developmental
Science, 9(3), 237-255. ![]()
Followed by
commentaries by Bishop, Goswami, Nicolson & Fawcett, and Tallal.
Followed by our reply: Ramus, F., White,
S., &
Frith, U.
(2006). Weighing the evidence between competing theories of dyslexia.
Developmental
Science,
9(3),
265-269.
The latest developments in this line of research have investigated similar questions in autistic children (in collaboration with Liz Milne and John Swettenham, also at UCL) and systematically compared dyslexic and autistic children on language and sensorimotor measures. The latter study suggests that sensorimotor impairments are neither necessary nor sufficient to cause phonological and reading difficulties:
Milne,
E., White, S., Campbell,
R., Swettenham, J., Hansen, P. C., & Ramus, F. (2006). Motion
and
form coherence detection in autistic spectrum disorder: Relationship to
motor control and 2:4 digit ratio. Journal
of Autism and Developmental Disorders, 36(2), 225-237.
White,
S., Frith, U., Milne, E., Rosen, S., Swettenham, J., & Ramus,
F.
(2006). A double dissociation between sensorimotor impairments and
reading disability: A
comparison of autistic and dyslexic children. Cognitive Neuropsychology, 23(5),
748-761. ![]()
I have also carried out a review of the dyslexia literature, which have converged with the results from my own studies:
Ramus,
F. (2003).
Developmental
dyslexia: specific phonological deficit or general sensorimotor
dysfunction?
Current
Opinion in Neurobiology, 13(2), 212-218. ![]()
The conclusion is that my research strongly supports the phonological theory of dyslexia. However the phonological theory in its current state is unable to explain why a significant proportion of dyslexics also have sensorimotor deficits (and does not much care about it). I have most recently tried to fill this gap with a new neurological model:
Ramus,
F. (2002). Evidence for
a
domain-specific deficit in developmental dyslexia. Behavioral
and
Brain
Sciences, 25(6), 767-768. (Commentary
on Thomas
&
Karmiloff-Smith
2002) ![]()
Ramus,
F. (2004). Neurobiology of dyslexia: A reinterpretation of the
data. Trends in
Neurosciences,
27(12), 720-726. ![]()
Ramus,
F. (2005). Motion
perception deficit: risk
factor or non-specific marker for neuro-developmental disorders? Cahiers de Psychologie
Cognitive/Current
Psychology of Cognition, 23(1-2), 180-188.
(Commentary on
Milne et al. 2005)
Ramus,
F.
(2006). A
neurological model of dyslexia and other domain-specific developmental
disorders with an associated sensorimotor syndrome. In G. D. Rosen
(Ed.), The Dyslexic
Brain: New
Pathways in Neuroscience Discovery (pp. 75-101). Mahwah,
NJ:
Lawrence Erlbaum
Associates. ![]()
More recent work has further confirmed the limited involvement of auditory perceptual deficits in dyslexia:
Soroli,
E., Szenkovits, G., & Ramus, F. (2010). Exploring dyslexics'
phonological deficit III: Foreign speech perception and production.
Dyslexia, 16, 318-340. ![]()
Ramus,
F., & Ahissar, M. (2012). Developmental dyslexia: the difficulties
of interpreting poor performance, and the importance of normal
performance. Cognitive Neuropsychology, 29(1-2), 104-122. ![]()
Agus,
T. R., Carrión Castillo, A., Pressnitzer, D., & Ramus, F.
(in press). Perceptual learning of acoustic noise by dyslexic
individuals. Journal of Speech, Language and Hearing Research.![]()