Reading Disabilities
and Irlen Tinted Filter Lenses
Have you heard of tinted lenses
as a remedy for reading disabilities, rapid fatigue when reading,
headaches, sore eyes and poor depth perception? For more than fifteen
years this new technique has been available in Australia with some
very exciting results. The technique uses precisely prescribed tinted
filter lenses to correct perceptual disorders which often cause
reading disabilities.
The technique was developed in the early 1980s by Professor Helen
Irlen, a Californian psychologist. She was the director of a research
project, investigating adult reading disabilities at the University
of California. She was talking with a group of adults who had severe
reading difficulties. Their comments prompted her to ask them what
the reading page looked like to them and she was astonished by some
of the comments they made. Around her she was hearing people saying,
"That's what I see too! When I tell my family, they laugh at me."
They described how the letters on the page seemed to move around,
how the white page strained their eyes, how they saw streaks of
white on the page, how the print went blurry, how they saw ghosting
of letters etc.
Since 1986 over 80,000 children and adults world wide have been
prescribed Irlen lenses. Most have been people with reading disabilities
ranging from severe to mild, while others suffered from chronic
glare headaches and Chronic Fatigue Syndrome. Some have visual disorders
and reading problems resulting from head injuries due to an accident,
or to central nervous system infections and some have Autism Spectrum
Disorder. The technique is seen as the biggest breakthrough in assisting
individuals with learning disabilities for more than twenty years.
It must be stressed that this method does not help every person
with reading disabilities. Recent research indicates that approximately
60% of individuals, both children and adults, who find reading difficult,
fatiguing or stressful, can be helped considerably with Irlen tinted
filter lenses. When one considers that recent research on adult
literacy in Australia, shows that between 15% and 20% of all adults,
or more than 1.5 million adults, are functionally illiterate, then
the number of people who might benefit from the lenses is apparent.
All the more reason why children at school, especially in primary
school, should be screened if they are struggling with reading skills
or they avoid reading consistently.
Helen Irlen called this disorder "Scotopic Sensitivity". Essentially
it is a specific sensitivity of the visual system to certain frequencies
within the white light spectrum. This appears to be an inherited
disability which causes rapid fatigue of the visual system resulting
in a range of symptoms, most of which interfere with effective and
efficient reading performance.
It should be stressed that these symptoms persist despite thorough
optometric assessment and the wearing of prescription lenses.
However, prior to assessing a client for Irlen lenses, a recent
optometric assessment is recommended. This is to ensure that any
refractive or astigmatic problems have been corrected. The individualised
Irlen tint can only be added to existing prescription lenses if
they have been manufactured according to our precise specifications.
Often, some optometrists prescribe low-powered stress lenses for
children with reading difficulties. Sometimes this is quite helpful,
but it rarely solves a serious reading difficulty.
There are still many "sceptics" within the community. When the lenses
were first used, there was very little scientific evidence to support
the theory. However there are now over a hundred research publications
on Irlen tinted lenses, including research from Harvard Medical
School and the Canadian Medical Association.
A recent breakthrough in research on dyslexia at Harvard University
clearly links disorders in a person's visual perception as a major
cause. A team of neuroscientists, lead by Dr Margaret Livingstone
has reported research in the prestigious research journal "Proceedings
of the American Academy of Sciences". Their findings show that Visual
dyslexia is the result of the failure of the visual perceptual system's
neuro-circuits to keep proper timing. They also reported that coloured
filters can correct this imbalance and so reduce the effect of dyslexia,
such as chronic loss of place, reversing words, blurred vision,
movement of the print and rapid fatigue when reading.
Dr Drake Duane, an authority on dyslexia and learning disorders
at the Arizona State University, states that this research provides
"convincing evidence that the nervous system of those who are dyslexic
are atypical and provides theoretical support for one treatment
of dyslexia through the use of coloured filters for reading".
Dr Galaburda, Director of the Dyslexia Neuro-anatomical Centre at
Beth Israel Hospital in Boston, views this research breakthrough
as indicating that the visual system consists of two major neural
pathways. "One of these pathways, the magnocellular system, is composed
of large cells that carry out fast processes and is used for seeing
motion, stereoscopic vision, depth perception, low contrast and
locating objects in space. The second pathway, the parvocellular
system, is composed of smaller cells that carry out slower processes.
It specialises in colour, detailed forms, high contrast and stationary
images." Dr Galaburda explains that a neurological timing imbalance
or 'sluggishness' in the timing between these two systems leads
to visual dyslexia.
This is because of the visual perceptual demands of the reading
process, usually in situations of high contrast of black print on
white paper. It also accounts for why a significant number of people
with reading difficulties have poor depth perception and are clumsy.
In essence, the disturbed synchronisation of the two visual perceptual
pathways leads to these perceptual disorders. Autopsies conducted
by Dr Galaburda on the brains of ten deceased people, five known
dyslexics and five normal readers, showed distinct anatomical cell
differences (in size) when the parvocellular and magnocellular cells
were compared.
Professor Mary Williams, University of New Orleans, has completed
research which indicates that the 'sluggish' timing or lack of synchronisation
of these two visual pathways in dyslexic children is corrected with
the use of coloured filters.
Dr Solman, a research psychologist and Professor Dain, a research
optometrist, both at the University of New South Wales, recently
published research that also provides strong evidence that contrast
sensitivity of white to black when reading print on white paper,
was a significant factor in creating reading perceptual disorders.
Also coloured filters that were specifically prescribed for particular
reading disabled children, dramatically reduced sensitivity and
improved reading.
From this recent research evidence, there can no longer be any doubt
that Helen Irlen was correct. Carefully and precisely prescribed
spectrally modified, Irlen tinted filters substantially reduce perceptual
disorders for those children and adults who have this visual perceptual
dysfunction she calls "Scotopic Sensitivity / Irlen Syndrome".