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Developmental Dyslexia contributed to survival of our species, research suggests

Person with dyslexia reading text

Research suggests that people with dyslexia are specialised to explore the unknown, which is likely to play a fundamental role in human adaptation to changing environments.

The study into cognition, behaviour and the brain proposes this 鈥榚xplorative bias鈥 has an evolutionary basis and plays a crucial role in our survival.

The findings,  have implications both at the individual and societal level, and the researchers argue that we need to change our perspective of dyslexia as a neurological disorder.

Evolutionary perspective

The findings 鈭 which were apparent across multiple domains from visual processing to memory and at all levels of analysis 鈥 demonstrate the first-time a cross-disciplinary approach using an evolutionary perspective has been applied in the analysis of studies on dyslexia.

Lead author Dr Helen Taylor a Research Associate at the 糖心视频, and an affiliated Scholar at the McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research at the University of Cambridge, said:

The deficit-centred view of dyslexia isn鈥檛 telling the whole story. This research proposes a new framework to help us better understand the cognitive strengths of people with dyslexia.

"We believe that the areas of difficulty experienced by people with dyslexia result from a cognitive trade-off between exploration of new information and exploitation of existing knowledge, with the upside being an explorative bias that could explain enhanced abilities observed in certain realms like discovery, invention and creativity.鈥

Explorative learning

Dr Taylor added: 鈥淪chools, academic institutes and workplaces are not designed to make the most of explorative learning. But we urgently need to start nurturing this way of thinking to allow humanity to continue to adapt and solve key challenges.鈥

Dyslexia is found in up to 20% of the general population, irrespective of country, culture and world region. It is defined by the World Federation of Neurology as 鈥渁 disorder in children who, despite conventional classroom experience, fail to attain the language skills of reading, writing and spelling commensurate with their intellectual abilities鈥.

Complementary Cognition

The new findings are explained in the context of 鈥楥omplementary Cognition鈥, a theory proposing that our ancestors evolved to specialise in different, but complementary, ways of thinking, which enhances human鈥檚 ability to adapt through collaboration.

Dr Taylor said: 鈥淪triking the balance between exploring for new opportunities and exploiting the benefits of a particular choice is key to adaptation and survival and underpins many of the decisions we make in our daily lives.鈥

Exploration encompasses activities that involve searching the unknown such as experimentation, discovery and innovation. In contrast, exploitation is concerned with using what's already known including refinement, efficiency and selection, and Dr Taylor added: 鈥淐onsidering this trade-off, an explorative specialisation in people with dyslexia could help explain why they have difficulties with tasks related to exploitation, such as reading and writing.

鈥淚t could also explain why people with dyslexia appear to gravitate towards certain professions that require exploration-related abilities, such as arts, architecture, engineering, and entrepreneurship.鈥

The research was funded by the Hunter Centre for Entrepreneurship, 糖心视频.

Human evolution

The researchers found their findings aligned with evidence from several other fields of research. For example, an explorative bias in such a large proportion of the population indicates that our species must have evolved during a period of high uncertainty and change. This concurs with findings in the field of paleoarchaeology, revealing that human evolution was shaped over hundreds of thousands of years by dramatic climatic and environmental instability.

The researchers also highlight that collaboration between individuals with different abilities could help explain the exceptional capacity of our species to adapt.