Jet pilot technology
for dyslexia
Technology
used by jet pilots is to be used to diagnose children with dyslexia.
Defense
researchers have been commissioned by the Department for Education to adapt military
aviation technology to help identify dyslexia in young children. The
Defense Evaluation and Research Agency (Dera) has been given £100,000 to build
a prototype model, which will make use of equipment which tracks the eye movements
of jet pilots. Cutting-edge
technologyThis
cutting-edge technology will be re-versioned into a child friendly system which
will track eye movements in a way that is believed to help detect dyslexia.
The system has glass lenses,
like a pair of spectacles, which can follow where the wearer is looking. In its
military application, the system has helped pilots to control computers or steer
weapons and to show designers how to optimize the layout of instrument panels.
The Department for
Education project is seeking to customize this technology to follow the eye movements
of young children, to analyze links between dyslexia and abnormal eye movements.
Children's eye
movement patternsThis
follows research by Professor John Stein at Oxford University who has worked on
how children's eye movement patterns can indicate dyslexia. "This
technology has already been proved in the harsh environment of a jet cockpit.
We want to see how this could be used with pre-school children," said Eric Scargill,
new business manager at Dera. Early
detection Early
detection is believed to be important in helping to tackle dyslexia and to reduce
the amount of learning loss which can occur when undiagnosed dyslexics are left
to struggle through school without any specialist help. The
application of military technology is to be announced by the Education Secretary
David Blunkett as part of a £25m package of measures to help pupils with special
educational needs. Screening
three and four year oldsThis
will involve the screening of three and four year olds in nurseries and playgroups
for any learning difficulties. The
Royal Berkshire Hospital and the University Laboratory of Physiology, Oxford University
will also be taking part in research, alongside the military research scientists.
With thanks to the consistently informative
BBC
(March 20th 2001). |