Developmentally impaired processing speed decreases more than normally with age.

Neuroreport

Department of Psychology, PO Box 13 (Meritullinkatu 1 B), FIN-00014 University of Helsinki, Finland.

Published: July 2002

Several studies show that although function may recover after brain damage the insult can nevertheless cause accelerated deterioration in old age. This has been interpreted as indicating reduced neuronal capacity to counteract age-related decline with plastic changes. Psychosocial and compensatory factors obscure the neuronal explanation. Since the speed of processing sequential temporal information is impaired in developmental dyslexia, we investigated its dependence on age (20-59 years) in psychosocially comparable groups of dyslexic and fluent readers using six tasks. Processing speed was impaired in dyslexia and decreased with age. The decrement was faster in dyslexic than normal readers in processing periodic stimuli. No exacerbation occurred in reading and other experiential factors. Our results, therefore, support the neuronal explanation.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/00001756-200207020-00008DOI Listing

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