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RCSV and SO 45th Anniversary Joint Distinguished Lecture: Insights from Visual Neuroscience on Developmental Dyslexia

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  • Date

    23 Mar 2023

  • Organiser

    Research Centre for SHARP Vision (RCSV) and School of Optometry (SO)

  • Time

    09:00 - 10:30

  • Venue

    Online via Zoom  

Speaker

Prof. Deborah Giaschi

Enquiry

Ms Shirley NG (852) 3400 2312 info.rcsv@polyu.edu.hk

Summary

Developmental dyslexia is a common learning disability characterized by difficulty in the acquisition of reading skills. Although neurobiological in nature, the cause is largely unknown. Deficits in motion perception and visual attention are well documented, but the role of these deficits in the diagnosis and treatment of dyslexia remains controversial. Vulnerability in the dorsal visual stream during development has been proposed to underlie dyslexia and other developmental disorders, but reading deficits may be better linked to the ventral stream. I will review current diagnostic criteria, theories about single core deficits versus multifactorial causes, and recommendations on the role of eye care professionals in the management of dyslexia. I will then present functional MRI work from my lab on the neural correlates of reading and motion perception deficits, functional connectivity between language and visual areas, and cortical changes in response to reading intervention.

Keynote Speaker

Prof. Deborah Giaschi

Prof. Deborah Giaschi

Professor, Department of Ophthalmology and Visual Sciences
The University of British Columbia, Canada  

Deborah Giaschi is a Professor in the Department of Ophthalmology and Visual Sciences at the University of British Columbia in Vancouver, Canada, and an associate member of the Department of Psychology and the Department of Pediatrics. Her research lab is at BC Children’s Hospital where she studies the typical and atypical development of vision in children. She uses behavioural and MRI techniques to understand the neural basis of dyslexia and amblyopia to advance new methods of treatment. She obtained her PhD in Experimental Psychology at York University in Toronto in 1990 under the supervision of Professor Stuart Anstis.

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