The Role of Visual Factors in Dyslexia

J Cogn. 2023 Jun 29;6(1):31. doi: 10.5334/joc.287. eCollection 2023.

Abstract

What are the causes of dyslexia? Decades of research reflect a determined search for a single cause where a common assumption is that dyslexia is a consequence of problems with converting phonological information into lexical codes. But reading is a highly complex activity requiring many well-functioning mechanisms, and several different visual problems have been documented in dyslexic readers. We critically review evidence from various sources for the role of visual factors in dyslexia, from magnocellular dysfunction through accounts based on abnormal eye movements and attentional processing, to recent proposals that problems with high-level vision contribute to dyslexia. We believe that the role of visual problems in dyslexia has been underestimated in the literature, to the detriment of the understanding and treatment of the disorder. We propose that rather than focusing on a single core cause, the role of visual factors in dyslexia fits well with risk and resilience models that assume that several variables interact throughout prenatal and postnatal development to either promote or hinder efficient reading.

Keywords: Developmental Disorders; Dyslexia; Reading; Visual Deficits; Visual Perception.

Grants and funding

This work was supported by the Icelandic Research Fund (project grants no: 228916, 195912, 174013) and the University of Iceland Research Fund.