Children with Dyslexia Benefit from Short Combined Reading and Motor Training: Objective Measures Assessed by Eye Movements and Postural Sway Recordings
Simona Caldani, Elie Khoury, Richard Delorme, Maria Pia Bucci

TL;DR
Children with dyslexia showed improved reading and motor skills after a short combined training program involving reading and postural exercises.
Contribution
A novel combined reading and postural training program is shown to improve motor control in children with dyslexia.
Findings
Training group showed significant decreases in reading time and fixation duration.
Postural instability significantly reduced in the training group.
Control group showed no significant changes in eye movements or postural recordings.
Abstract
Background/Objectives: Children with dyslexia report poor motor control; several studies have shown poor eye movements control during reading and important body instability in these children. The present study aimed to test in children whether reading and postural abilities in children with dyslexia could benefit from a short combined reading and postural training program. Methods: Thirty-two children with dyslexia were randomly assigned to training group (G1) or control group (G2). All participants completed eye movements recording during reading and postural recording under an unstable support before and after the intervention. G1 underwent a 10 min combined reading and postural training while G2 had a 10 min rest. During reading, the reading time, the duration of fixations, as well as the occurrence, amplitude, and number of forward saccades (saccades from the left to the right) and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsChildren's Physical and Motor Development · Reading and Literacy Development · Writing and Handwriting Education
