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Musical games benefit dyslexic kids

Reportedly there's a strong association between the ability to perceive metrical structure in music and learning to read among children with dyslexia. This is critical for the efficient perception of...

Updated on: Jun 30, 2011 01:34 PM IST
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A study led by an Indian-origin researcher has shown a strong association between the ability to perceive metrical structure in music and learning to read among children with dyslexia.

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Dyslexic children often find it difficult to count the number of syllables in spoken words or to determine whether words rhyme. These subtle difficulties are seen across languages with different writing systems and they indicate that the dyslexic brain has trouble processing the way that sounds in spoken language are structured.

In the new study, researchers at Cambridge have shown, using a music task, that this is linked to a broader difficulty in perceiving rhythmic patterns, or metrical structure.

Martina Huss, Usha Goswami and colleagues gave a group of 10-year-old children, with and without dyslexia, a listening task involving short tunes that had simple metrical structures with accents on certain notes. The children had to decide whether a pair of tunes sounded similar or different. To make two tunes sound 'different', the researchers varied the length of the stronger notes. However, it was not the perception of the length of these notes that was shown to affect how succesful a child completed the task, but the child's perception of 'rise time', which is the time it takes for a sound to reach its peak intensity. In speech, for example, the rise time of a syllable is the time it takes to produce a vowel. Stressed syllables have longer rise times, so rise time is a critical cue that helps in the perception of rhythmic regularity in speech.

The researchers argued that the ability to perceive the alternation of strong and weak 'beats' (stressed and unstressed syllables) is critical for the efficient perception of phonology in language. Furthermore, as rhythm is more overt in music than language, they suggest that early interventions based on musical games may offer previously unsuspected benefits for learning to read.

The study has been published in the Elsevier's Cortex.

 
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