1. Motor Symbol Sequencing
2. Symbol Relations
3. Memory for Information or Instructions
4. Predicative Speech
5. Broca's Speech Pronunciation
6. Auditory Speech Discrimination
7. Symbolic Thinking
8. Symbol Recognition
9. Lexical Memory
10. Kinesthetic Perception
11. Kinesthetic Speech
12. Artifactual Thinking
13. Narrow Visual Span
14. Object Recognition
15. Spatial Reasoning
16. Mechanical Reasoning
17. Abstract Reasoning
18. Primary Motor
19. Supplementary Motor
1. Motor Symbol Sequencing {back
to Top}
This capacity is involved in the process of learning and consistently
producing a symbolic sequential motor pattern (e.g., writing
out the alphabet, or numbers). All sequential symbolic processes
involving input through the eye (e.g., reading), output through
the hand (e.g., writing) and mouth (e.g., speaking) are impaired
when there is a weakness in this capacity. Following are some
of the features of this problem.
Misreading - Words are misread due
to poorly developed patterns of eye fixations. The person reads "step hall" for
a road sign that says "steep hill". A truck driver
misreads road signs and bills of lading thus ending up in the
wrong locations and taking much longer to do his job than expected
despite superior intelligence.
Handwriting is messy and irregular. People with this dysfunction
frequently print rather than handwrite.
Writing is not automatic. The person has to concentrate on the
process of writing and as a result has less attention to focus
on the content of what is being written. This also slows down
the speed of writing so written assignments and tests often take
longer to complete than the allotted time.
Copying material from one location to another (i.e., from the
blackboard or a text into a notebook) is slow and often inaccurate.
Clerical work is painful and tedious and the person may have
a tendency to put it off.
Spelling - The person can spell the same word several different
ways on the same page.
Speech - The person tends to ramble and have difficulty getting
to the point. There is a tendency to leave out chunks of information
which are necessary for the listener to understand what the person
is talking about. The person has this information in his head
and thinks he has said it but it does not get expressed in speech.
It is difficult to get ideas out in the order of their importance
in speech, and the person may go back and forth over several
subjects, making his speech difficult for others to follow.
Mathematics - This problem affects accuracy in mathematical
computations. The person makes what appear to be careless errors
but which are really motor slips. For example the person thinks
one number in his head and writes down another number.
2. Symbol Relations {back
to Top}
This capacity is involved in understanding the relationships
among two or more ideas or concepts. A weakness in this capacity
may result in the following difficulties.
In more severe cases the child reverses the letters b-d-p-q.
The child has some trouble learning how to read a clock (an
analog clock). The relationship between the hands are mixed up
with the hour hand being read for the minute and vice versa or
the minute hand being misread by 5 or 10 minutes.
The person does not understand math
concepts. The person can learn math procedures but has no idea
of the meaning or "why" of
the procedure. Mathematics is mechanical or procedural rather
than conceptual. The person does not understand formulas such
as distance = rate X time and therefore has trouble figuring
out the formulas for rate and time.
The person has trouble understanding cause and effect relationships
or the reasons why events happen. This has implications for learning
in school, on the job and in social situations.
The person has trouble understanding grammar and doing grammatical
analysis.
The person has to read material over and over again and is never
certain as to whether he has understood what is being said.
The person has great difficulty figuring
out word problems such as "Sally is shorter than Jane who is taller than Mary.
Who is tallest?" because he can't see the relationships.
The person sits in on a seminar and is not able to comment on
the points being made because he does not fully grasp the meaning
at that moment. After he leaves the seminar he plays the ideas
over inside his head, comes to understand what was said and then
is ready to comment but the situation is no longer available.
This is a very frustrating experience. This can also happen in
a discussion in a social situation.
The person can't grasp the logical inconsistencies in what some
body is saying, which may leave him prey to destructive friendships
or con artists.
There is often personality rigidity or stubbornness associated
with this learning dysfunction because the person has difficulty
considering several alternatives logically at the same time in
order to plan and make decisions. Once the person has made up
his mind it is very hard for it to be changed because he has
so much trouble holding two or more alternatives in his head
simultaneously and looking at the advantages and disadvantages
of each. He can't see the relationships between two or more positions.
The individual often has trouble understanding and communicating
his own thoughts and feelings to others due to this problem.
This can lead to feelings of anger and frustration on the one
hand and helplessness, alienation and depression on the other.
The most salient feature is a sense of uncertainty
- of never being able to verify meaning but only guess. There
is a general difficulty in interpreting the meaning of any symbolic
information whether spoken or written and the person is left
with a constant sense of uncertainty as to whether he has correctly
grasped the meaning intended.
3. Memory for Information or Instructions {back
to Top}
This is the capacity for remembering chunks of information such
as instructions. A weakness in this capacity results in the following
symptoms.
There is difficulty remembering verbal information or instructions.
The person has trouble remembering and therefore following lectures
or extended conversations or instructions. Instructions often
have to be repeated several times before the person is certain
of what he is supposed to do, and this certainty doesn't last.
The person is often aware that he has forgotten and is too embarrassed
to ask again, after having had it explained so many times, and
may decide to 'muddle through'.
One example is not being able to follow a radio program because
the person could not remember enough of the information as she
was listening. When she improved on this capacity she was able
to follow the radio to the point that she even won a radio contest.
This can also happen when watching TV or a movie - the person
can't remember parts of the newscast or movie.
People with very poor memory for instructions/information tend
to smile a great deal and not participate in any conversation
or discussion because they can't remember enough of the information
to follow. They also tend to tune out in lectures, conversations
and job situations because they get tired due to the extra effort
required to retain the information.
Parents often think their child is stubborn, irresponsible or
lazy because they ask him to do something and it doesn't get
done because the child forgets. If the child is told to do something
and then gets distracted, for example by answering the telephone,
the instruction will be totally forgotten, to the point where
he may insist that the request was never made.
The child may get home after school and forget what the teacher
asked him to do for homework.
When a person with this dysfunction studies there is a gradual
degradation of the information he is trying to memorize. The
person may memorize information for history, finding it hard
initially, and he may have to go over it 10 times, but he feels
that he knows a fair amount of the information by the end of
studying. An hour later he's got 3/4 of it, a couple of hours
later he's got about 1/2 and by the time he writes the exam he
is in trouble.
One boy with a severe memory for instructions/information problem
did not realize songs had stories in the lyrics because he could
never remember the lyrics. This came as a revelation to him when
he improved on this capacity.
One man who flies an airplane has trouble remembering the information
from the tower (fortunately it is repeated several times) and
reported some near misses due to this problem. This same man
would be sent out to the grocery store with a verbal list of
4 or more items and would invariably forget several items.
People with this problem tend to compensate
by taking notes in order to help them remember information or
by developing rigid habits without which their lives fall apart.
4.
Predicative Speech {back to Top}
This is the capacity for the sense of how symbols (words and
numbers) interconnect sequentially into fluent sentences and
procedures. This occurs in thinking, speech and writing. Following
are examples of problems caused by weaker functioning in this
capacity.
The ability to rehearse and recode information and actions through
speech inside one's head (internal speech) is impaired. In any
learning situation this impairs the person from being able to
actively recode information through internal speech in order
to retain the information solidly in memory. Thus the information
that can be memorized immediately, breaks down over time with
a significant loss in long term retention due to an inability
to recode the information. In other words, the person may show
an inability to recapitulate or 'put things in his own words'.
The person tends to have stereotypic
speech (e.g., a store of memorized or cliched phrases) because
he has trouble elaborating or extending speech. The person
tends to speak in short sentences. Written expression is similar.
The person does not have a sense of the appropriateness of
where words go positionally in a sentence. The sentences used
often are incomplete and do not make sense even when complete,
e.g., "I would ask a loan for the bank."
There is difficulty in following long sentences.
The person lacks tact in what he says
and may appear to be rude because there is a failure of active
internal mental rehearsal of what he is going to say and what
the consequences of this would be. An example: a girl receives
a cassette of a rock group for a birthday present and hands
the tape back to the giver saying "I
don't like this group".
Procedures in mathematics can be learned with some extra effort
but there is a breakdown of the steps of the procedure over a
relatively short time. A common example is that the steps in
a long division question fall apart.
The person does not work out inside his head using internal
speech the significance and consequences of doing something before
acting so behavior can appear impulsive or ill considered.
The person has very limited ability to say things to himself
inside his head to control his behavior. He cannot go through
a process of active internal rehearsal of what he should do in
various situations. He may feel 'parachuted' into an experience
and not be able to develop an effective response to his environment.
The "ASK BEFORE YOU DO" syndrome:
Parents report that their child tries to be helpful and goes
ahead and does something without asking before he does it.
The person is not capable of thinking out the possible consequences
of the action beforehand. For example the child washes his
father's car which has just been waxed or the child trims the
tree in the front yard almost cutting it down.
5. Broca's Speech
Pronunciation {back to Top}
This is the ability to learn how to pronounce syllables and
then to learn how to integrate the syllables into the stabilized
and consistent pronunciation of a word. A weakness in this capacity
leads to the following difficulties.
The person feels uncertain as to how a word is pronounced. The
pronunciation of words does not achieve stability or consistency
hence the person thinks of several ways to say the same word
not being certain which is correct. The person mispronounces
words or may avoid using words he knows and understands because
of this uncertainty about pronunciation. This may restrict the
spoken vocabulary to simpler words.
It is difficult to learn and enlist phonics skills in the reading
process. The person's silent reading vocabulary is often several
grades higher than his oral vocabulary because he recognizes
the meanings of words that he can't pronounce.
The speech process requires more concentration than normal so
the person has trouble thinking and talking at the same time.
The person must concentrate on pronouncing the words and as a
result can lose his train of thought. This results in shyness
(quietness) in new situations involving talking with people,
and a tendency to get drowned out by people who find it easier
to speak.
There is great difficulty in public speaking unless working
from prepared text.
The speech tends to be flat and monotonous with a lack of rhythm
and musical intonation. There is a tendency to mumble.
This impairment also interferes with the
ability to learn the spoken aspect of a foreign language.
6.
Auditory Speech Discrimination {back
to Top}
This is the ability to discriminate between similar sounding
speech sounds (e.g., fear - hear, doom - tomb). A problem in
this area results in the following difficulties.
The person mishears words in a conversation, discussion, lecture,
TV program or series of instructions and therefore misinterprets
some of the information he hears. He also has to use active attention
in order to discriminate some of the words he hears which can
result in his becoming fatigued due to extra effort required
to listen and this can lead to his tuning out the conversation.
It can also lead to serious misunderstandings if the person interprets
what he hears as an insult.
While taking notes the person mishears some words and writes
down the wrong words. When he tries to study from these notes
he is unable to because the notes do not make sense.
There is difficulty discriminating foreign language speech sounds
which makes learning a foreign language through hearing difficult.
A person with this problem has more trouble understanding someone
who speaks with an accent. One girl with a severe auditory speech
discrimination problem dropped out of grade 13 because she became
embarrassed with having to ask the teacher to repeat himself
so frequently.
A person with this problem tires in speech
listening situations because he has to use extra attention and
energy to interpret the words that he cannot clearly hear, even
though his hearing for loudness and pitch is normal.
7.
Symbolic Thinking {back to Top}
The symbolic thinking capacity is responsible for developing
and maintaining plans and strategies for action through the use
of language. It is the capacity for mental initiative in symbolic
tasks. Problems in this capacity are reflected in the following
ways.
The student has great difficulty developing strategies for studying.
If shown a study method he will follow this but he cannot develop
his own study strategies. This applies to other situations as
well; if shown a strategy the person may be able to implement
it, but could not originate it.
The person has trouble keeping his attention focused on a language
related task to completion. The person is easily distracted from
a task and frequently labelled as having a short attention span.
The person cannot maintain the focus of his attention in a school,
job or social situation.
The person cannot work out an active plan to organize himself
so his behavior is disorganized. There is a central lack of self-directed
organization.
The person is not self-correcting of his mistakes and is frequently
unaware that he has made mistakes. The person has difficulty
learning from his mistakes due to this lack of awareness. Along
with this there is a general lack of worry or concern about his
performance.
At a milder level of impairment the person can worry to some
extent about something but does not pull in all the facts and
keeps hammering away at one or two things until distracted again.
After it has been pointed out, the person becomes aware of the
foolishness of his behavior, but can't work out strategies to
prevent it from happening again.
The person cannot work out long term goals and plans for himself.
He tends to respond to the immediate situation in a 'live for
the moment' fashion. Other people may view him as untrustworthy
or flighty because of the lack of stability in long range planning.
The person's choice of friends may be based on how 'fun' they
are with no consideration of the long term consequences of the
friendship.
If a person does not know the answer to a question immediately
he will leave the question. There is no process of active probing
or searching for the answer, no mental initiative. The person
is mentally passive.
There is a difficulty in seeing the main point or overall idea
of a symbolic activity (e.g., a discussion, a story, a movie,
a math question) and a tendency to get sidetracked by irrelevant
details.
The person fails to take into account all the existing elements
in a situation before acting and therefore behavior is inappropriate
to the specific situation; he cannot look before he leaps.
The person reduces a situation to a stereotype
of an already known situation so there is a lack of differentiation
between situations and a response that is appropriate in one
situation is applied in another where it is not appropriate.
For example, the person may think that a strategy developed by
a character in a television program is an appropriate strategy
to deal with a real life situation.
8.
Symbol Recognition {back to Top}
This is the capacity to recognize and remember a word or symbol
visually that has been seen before. The following problems occur
when this capacity is weak.
The person has to study a word many
more times than average before he can visually memorize the
word and thus recognize it and say it correctly the next time
he sees it. The person literally does not recognize the word "house" as
the same word he has seen before. As a result learning to read
and spell words is a slow process. A person with this problem
has trouble visually recognizing his spelling errors.
The person's word recognition level (i.e., words he can see and
say immediately) is low.
Reading speed is slow because the person has to rely on sounding
out words that he should be able to recognize.
The person has great difficulty visually
memorizing symbol patterns in mathematics (e.g., patterns in
algebra) or in chemistry (e.g., chemical equations).
9. Lexical
Memory {back to Top}
This is the capacity necessary for remembering several words
in a series.
A person with this problem has trouble remembering more than
three unrelated words in a series.
Auditory acquisition of new words is impaired. The person has
to hear the word associated with its meaning several times before
he remembers it. The person has trouble recognizing and remembering
that one word is a synonym for another. This significantly impairs
the reading process.
The person has trouble following oral information
due to the limited holding capacity of his memory.
10. Kinesthetic
Perception {back to Top}
This is the capacity for perception of where both sides of the
body are in space. The following are features of a problem in
this capacity.
The person has limited awareness of where one or both sides of
his body are in space. He has a tendency to bump into objects,
doorways, etc. with the affected side of the body.
When driving a car the person is less aware of one side of the
car than the other. This can result in scratching the car more
frequently on one side, taking corners too wide and driving too
close to either the right or left side of the road.
The person is less aware of where his hands and fingers are
when cutting with a knife or using tools and as a result may
injure himself more often than other people.
If the problem is severe the person may hurt himself on the
impaired side and be less aware of where the pain is coming from.
If the problem occurs in the writing hand there is uneven pressure
and the person wanders on and off the line when writing.
In more severe cases there is an inability to recognize objects
through a sense of touch. A person can not distinguish between
his keys or lighter when feeling in his pocket.
There may be some degree of awkwardness of body movement.
There is also less articulated mouth movement
which results in some speech slurring.
11. Kinesthetic Speech {back
to Top}
This is a lack of awareness of the
position of the lips and tongue. It results in slurred speech.
A person with this problem will have difficulty with rapidly
repeating such tongue twisters as "which wristwatch" or "one runway".
12.
Artifactual Thinking {back to Top}
This capacity is necessary for the coordination, modulation
and interpretation of emotions. The following problems occur
when this capacity is impaired.
The person has difficulty registering and interpreting his own
emotions. The person's emotions are less refined and differentiated.
The person's capacity for being emotionally reactive or responsive
is impaired.
The person cannot interpret non-verbal information such as facial
expressions and body language and as a result he can't change
his behavior according to the signals people are sending him.
For example the person cannot read his boss so he is unaware
of whether the boss thinks he is doing a good job or not. Similarly
the person is unable to interpret a teacher's reactions which
can interfere with the learning process. Also the person does
not always act appropriately in social situations because he
does not perceive the significance of the non-verbal information.
The person tends to talk about something excessively not picking
up the cues that other people are not interested in listening
and want him to stop.
The person has trouble resisting impulses and can become dominated
by them. One example is excessive impulse buying.
There is a lack of anticipatory planning and of developing long
term strategies to deal with situations.
The person does not get worried in situations when he should.
There is a failure of active surveying of
visual details to get the allover picture of a situation. The
person prematurely stops looking before taking in all the visual
information and hence comes to the wrong conclusion about the
situation.
13. Narrow Visual Span {back
to Top}
This is the capacity responsible for the number of symbols or
objects a person can see in one visual fixation. When the span
is restricted to below four symbols the following problems occur.
The person cannot see whole words in a single visual fixation.
He must make three to ten times the normal number of fixations
to read a line of printed material. This causes severe eye fatigue
when reading and in severe cases can result in temporary blindness
from overworking the eyes. People with this problem report that
they cannot read for more than 30 to 60 minutes without taking
a break to rest their eyes. The eyes become bloodshot as the
eye muscles are overworked from making visual fixations.
Reading is experienced as jerky and errors occur when the eyes
become fatigued and miss fixations. These types of errors also
occur in clerical work.
Reading speed is slowed down due to the extra time required
to make the increased number of visual fixations.
Navigating in the dark is difficult, e.g.,
finding a seat in a darkened movie theater or driving in the
dark.
14. Object Recognition {back
to Top}
This is the capacity for recognizing and remembering the details
of visual objects. A weakness in this capacity is indicated by
the following characteristics.
A person with this problem takes longer to visually recognize
and locate objects that he is looking for. There is difficulty
finding items when shopping. The person walks by an item several
times before he recognizes it. The person also has trouble locating
something in a refrigerator.
A manager of a drugstore with this problem had great difficulty
learning to recognize his products and remember their locations
in the store.
The person has trouble remembering visual cues such as landmarks
to help in the process of remembering the location of places.
The person has trouble recognizing and remembering faces and
will miss details in facial expressions both of which cause social
and interpersonal problems.
The person has trouble remembering the visual
details of pictures.
15. Spatial Reasoning {back
to Top}
Spatial reasoning is the capacity to imagine a series of moves
through space inside your head before executing them. The following
are examples of weak functioning of this capacity.
The person has difficulty visualizing a pathway of movements
inside his head. This would result in some difficulty in finding
his way through space because the person cannot work out a map
inside his head of how to get from one place to another. As a
result the person frequently gets lost or takes much longer to
get from one place to another. In some cases the person becomes
phobic and avoids going anyplace new because of a fear of getting
lost. This difficulty applies even to small spaces like tracing
out pathways on circuit boards.
When map reading the person has to rotate the map to orient
towards the direction he is going. He cannot rotate the map inside
his head.
The person does not have a map of how space works inside his
head. Several people with this problem report that they cannot
imagine how streets connect with one another.
The person forgets spatially where he has left objects resulting
in loss of the object or spending extra time trying to find objects.
The person's workspace tends to be messy and disorganized with
material stacked in various piles within line of sight. This
is because the person cannot imagine how to organize his space.
If he puts something away in a filing cabinet or drawer he later
has trouble imagining in his head where it is.
The person has more trouble navigating in crowded space because
he cannot map a plan of how to get around obstacles ahead of
time.
In driving a car the person has trouble planning his moves ahead
of time and also has difficulty anticipating the future movements
of other cars on the road.
A person with this problem is poor at imagining moves ahead
in a game such as checkers or chess. They tend to react to the
other person's moves as they happen rather than developing a
series of planned moves.
In any sports activity requiring a spatial plan of movements
(e.g., planning how you are going to ski from the top of the
hill to the bottom, anticipating the movement of the tennis ball
and planning where to place yourself on the court to hit it)
the person is at a disadvantage.
There is difficulty imagining inside the head different ways
to arrange furniture in a room. The person has to physically
move the furniture in order to find the best arrangement.
There is difficulty in constructing geometric
figures.
16. Mechanical Reasoning {back
to Top}
A person with a mechanical reasoning problem
has difficulty in imagining how machines operate and in effectively
handling and using tools.
17. Abstract Reasoning {back
to Top}
A person with an abstract reasoning problem
would be impaired in being able to carry out in proper sequence
a series of steps in a task such as in computer programming,
using tools or in cooking. The person does not understand the
sequences as they need to be set up to get the correct outcome.
18.
Primary Motor {back to Top}
This problem interferes with the speed, strength
and control of muscle movements on one side of body or the other.
This results in some degree of awkwardness of body movement and
some degree of less articulated movement on the affected side
of the body.
19.
Supplementary Motor {back to Top}
A problem in this area impairs a person from carrying out internal
sequential mental operations such as doing mathematics inside
his head.
The person can be so impaired that simple counting processes
break down.
The person has difficulty calculating change.
If this dysfunction is at a moderate level of severity it means
that the person is unable to sufficiently hold numbers inside
his head to stably learn the addition and multiplication tables.
The person cannot make progress in mathematics beyond a grade
4 level. The person resorts to finger or stick counting when
solving math questions.
If the problem is less severe the person may be able to eventually
learn his math tables but since he cannot do even relatively
simple mental operations he cannot carry out the more difficult
aspects of dealing with fractions at a grade 4 to 6 level.
At a mild level a grade 10 student was not able to factor algebraically
due to the difficulty of not being able to imagine all the possible
combinations of factors that could be multiplied together to
lead to the algebraic trinomial he was trying to factor.
Anyone interested in a career involving mathematics requires
the supplementary motor capacity for mental operations at an
above average level to succeed.
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