Description
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- Cover
- Half title
- Title page
- Imprints page
- Contents
- Figures
- Table
- Foreword
- Preface
- Abbreviations
- Chapter 1 What Is Dyslexia?
- Introduction
- Definitions of Dyslexia
- Dyslexia 1: A Synonym for Reading Disability
- Dyslexia 2: A Condition Manifested by a Clinically Derived Subgroup of Poor Decoders
- What Might Be Indicators of Unexpected Performance?
- i. Intelligence
- a. Profiles of Cognitive Strengths and Weaknesses
- b. The Continuing Popularity of Intelligence for Diagnosing Dyslexia
- ii. Socioeconomic Disadvantage and Psychosocial Adversity
- iii. Inadequate Schooling and Educational Deprivation
- iv. Emotional and Behavioral Factors
- Inclusionary Approaches: The Search for Marker Variables
- Dyslexia and Language Disorders
- Dyslexia 3: Intractability to High Quality Intervention
- Dyslexia 4: A Neurodiverse Profile
- The Prevalence of Dyslexia
- The Difficulty of Bridging Science and Practice: The Rose Report
- Understandings and Definitions of Dyslexia: A Summary
- Reading Disability as a Multifactorial, Heterogeneous Syndrome
- A Note on the Terminology Employed in This Book
- Chapter 2 Explanations at the Cognitive Level
- Introduction
- From Single to Multiple Deficits
- The Phonological Deficit Hypothesis
- Rapid Naming and the Double Deficit
- Short-Term and Working Memory
- Executive Functions
- Auditory and Visual Explanations
- Auditory Processing
- Visual Processing and Visual Attention
- i. The Magnocellular Deficit Hypothesis
- ii. Visual Stress and Scotopic Sensitivity
- iii. Visual Attention
- Psycho-Motor Processing
- Cognitive Level Explanations and Educational Intervention
- Chapter 3 The Neurobiological Bases of Reading Disability
- Introduction
- The Reading Brain
- Postmortem Studies
- Studies of Anatomical Structure
- i. Anatomical Magnetic Resonance Imaging (aMRI)
- ii. Voxel- and Surface-Based Morphometry
- iii. Diffusion Tensor Imaging
- Studies of Brain Function
- i. Positron Emission Tomography
- ii. Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging
- iii. Electrophysiological Studies
- iv. Magnetoencephalography
- v. Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy
- vi. Functional Near Infrared Spectroscopy (fNIRS)
- Training and Intervention Studies
- Noninvasive Brain Stimulation Techniques
- Cross-Linguistic Imaging
- Brain Studies: A Summary
- Genetic Bases of Typical and Atypical Reading
- Historical Context
- Quantitative-Genetic Studies
- Molecular-Genetic Studies
- Genome Studies: A Summary
- The Promise of Neurobiology for Resolving the Dyslexia Debate
- Chapter 4 Assessment, Instruction, and Intervention
- Introduction
- Which General Approaches to the Teaching of Reading Are Likely to Minimize the Incidence and Severity of Reading Disability?
- The Reading Wars and the Science of Reading
- How Can We Best Identify Young Children at Risk of Reading Disability and Prevent Later Problems?
- Identification of Those at Risk of Reading Disability
- Reading Interventions in the Early Years
- What Can Be Done to Help Those Who Fail to Respond to Initial Interventions?
- What Is Specialist Dyslexia Teaching and Is This Particularly Effective for a Subgroup of Poor Readers Designated as Dyslexic?
- The Use of Computers and Assistive Technology
- Complementary and Alternative Approaches to Treatment
- Perceptual-Motor Training
- Visual Interventions
- Dietary and Chemical Interventions
- Auditory Interventions
- Neurofeedback
- Transcranial Stimulation
- The Allure of Complementary Treatment Approaches – Concluding Remarks
- The Pedagogic Value of a Diagnosis of Dyslexia
- Chapter 5 Dyslexia
- Introduction
- Learner Empowerment and Exculpation
- Gaining Access to Finite Resources
- The Perceived Failure of Teachers, Schools, and School Systems
- Meeting the Needs of Adult Learners in Further and Higher Education
- Neurodiversity, Disability, and the Dyslexic Identity
- Other Arguments Offered for Retention of the Label
- Dyslexia as a Meaningful Construct Has Been Evidenced by Findings from Genetics and Neuroscience
- Dyslexia’s Conceptual Problems Are Not Unique and Will Ultimately Be Resolved
- Fallacies of Relevance
- i. Straw Man and ad hominem Fallacies
- ii. ad verecundiam Arguments
- iii. ad populum Arguments
- iv. Arguments from Ignorance
- The Realities of the Dyslexia Debate: Meeting the Needs of All Struggling Readers
- Chapter 6 Conclusions and Recommendations
- The Way Forward?
- References
- Index
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