Health

Flickering screens may help children with reading, writing difficulties: Study Finds

The children were exposed to different levels of white noise, with the results showing that the amount of noise is critical for reading and memory

A new study has found a link between visual white noise and cognitive abilities such as memory, reading, and non-word decoding in children with reading and writing difficulties.

The study “Sensory white noise improves reading skills and memory recall in children with reading disability” was published in the scientific journal ‘Brain and Behavior’. Previous studies have shown that children with attention difficulties and/or ADHD solve cognitive tasks better when they are exposed to auditory white noise.

However, this is the first time that such a link has been demonstrated between visual white noise and cognitive abilities such as memory, reading and non-word decoding in children with reading and writing difficulties.

“The white noise to which we exposed the children, also called visual pixel noise, can be compared with giving children glasses. The effect on reading and memory was immediate,” explained Goran Soderlund, Senior Lecturer in Education at the University of Gothenburg and Professor of Special Education at the Western Norway University of Applied Sciences.

Flickering screens may help children with reading, writing difficulties: Study Finds

The study was conducted on around 80 students in the Smaland region of southern Sweden. The children who took part were selected following a word recognition test and were split into three groups: good readers, children with some reading difficulties, and children with major reading difficulties (i.e. having phonological impairments).

In the study, the children were asked to read 12 words while being exposed to four different levels of visual white noise, from zero to high. The test involved assessing how many of the words the children could read correctly and how many words they were able to recall afterward.

The results showed that the group with major reading difficulties, particularly phonological difficulties, performed significantly better when exposed to visual pixel noise. They read more words correctly and also recalled more words in the moderate-noise conditions. The white noise had no effect or negative effects on the good readers and those with only minor reading problems.

“This is the first evidence of visual white noise having effects on higher-level cognition, in this case both reading and memory,” said Goran Soderlund.

The children were exposed to different levels of white noise, with the results showing that the amount of noise is critical for reading and memory.

“You can compare it with being shortsighted and needing glasses. We saw that when we exposed the children to a medium level of white noise, their reading improved. However, their reading skills were less good when there was no noise or a high level of noise,” added Goran.

“These results show that children with reading and writing difficulties can be helped with an incredibly simple intervention. By adjusting screens in school or at home, we hope to be able to resolve their problems at a stroke. This is the first study of its kind, and replications are needed,” Goran further said.

Flickering screens may help children with reading, writing difficulties: Study Finds

Goran Soderlund now wants to further investigate the effects of white noise. He hopes that new studies can answer the question of whether practising with white noise for a prolonged period can lead to lasting improvements.

“It’s worth exploring, as we just don’t know. This first study of ours is basic research. But our results show that the children improved immediately, so it’s important to continue with new studies to establish whether this simple measure, which everyone can do on their own laptop, will actually provide enduring help for these children,” Goran said.

The study was conducted by Goran Soderlund, Jakob Asberg Johnels (Gillberg Neuropsychiatry Centre at the University of Gothenburg) and Andreas Magnusson, plus Bodil Rothen, Ellen Torstensson-Hultberg and Linda Falth (Linnaeus University). 

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Digpu News Staff

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