Brain training may help prevent dyslexia

In previous work, researchers found that children with dyslexia show a weak synchronisation with low frequency bands, and therefore, a poor activation of the regions related to language processing.

Brain training may help prevent dyslexia
(Representational image)

London: Effective activities could be used to train the brain to prevent future disorders such as dyslexia, scientists say.

Over the years, several studies have shown that the brain is able to naturally adjust the frequency of its waves with the oscillations or the rhythm of what it listens at each moment.

However, little was known so far of the consequences of the effect of brain synchronization, also known as brain-entrainment, in brain regions directly related to language processing.

Researchers at Basque Center on Cognition, Brain, and Language (BCBL) in Spain studied this aspect and has thoroughly analyzed the brain synchronization of 72 individuals.

According to Nicola Molinaro, a researcher at the BCBL, the experiment has shown that the synchronization with speech is more intense when the brain listens to low-frequency waves - those related to the accent, tones, and intonation of speech.

The study showed that this synchronization results in a direct activation of the brain regions related to language processing, as is the case of the Broca area, a section located in the frontal lobe of the left hemisphere and involved in the production of the same.

In previous work, researchers found that children with dyslexia show a weak synchronization with low-frequency bands, and therefore, a poor activation of the regions related to language processing.

Molinaro said that therapeutic interventions focused on language learning can be developed during childhood by stimulating low-frequency auditory components and thus obtain a clearer idea of the sounds that make up the language.

"For example, brain synchronization can be measured while a child with dyslexia is listening and giving a reward if it stimulates more synchronization with the low-frequency band," said Molinaro.

"It can help those who are out of sync to pay more attention to the tones, accents, and intonations of speech," she said.

This could be applicable to tasks with speech therapists, developing specific interventions to synchronize with low-frequency speech.

"With repeated training sessions we can help children with language delay to recover the mechanisms of attention," Molinaro said.

The researchers conducted two studies with 35 and 37 individuals respectively; these individuals had to listen to different sentences for about six minutes.

Through magneto encephalography (MEG), a non-invasive technique that allows accurately recording and analyzing the neuronal activity of the brain while the participants perform a task as simple as listening to talk, the brain regions that were synchronized with the different frequency bands were analyzed. 

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