Dr. Liam Whitaker

University of Alberta Study: Numbing Mouth Boosts Reading Speed, Aids Dyslexia

Exploring the Mouth-Brain Connection in Silent Reading

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The Groundbreaking University of Alberta Mouth Numbing Study

In a fascinating intersection of neuroscience and linguistics, researchers at the University of Alberta have uncovered a potential new avenue for enhancing reading speed through an unexpected method: numbing the mouth. This preliminary study suggests that disrupting oral somatosensory feedback during silent reading can accelerate processing without sacrificing accuracy, opening doors to innovative aids for individuals with dyslexia and other reading challenges. 44 15

The research, detailed in the paper titled Perturbing the pathway: The impact of lollipops and lidocaine on supramarginal gyrus activity during silent reading tasks, was led by PhD candidate Mitchell Holmes under the supervision of Professor Jacqueline Cummine in the Faculty of Rehabilitation Medicine. Published recently in Brain and Language, it challenges traditional views on how the brain handles silent reading by highlighting the subtle role of mouth sensations. 45

Decoding the Methodology: How the Experiment Unfolded

The study involved 30 proficient adult readers who underwent functional near-infrared spectroscopy (fNIRS) to monitor brain activity in key areas like the supramarginal gyrus, which bridges reading and speech processing. Participants completed two lexical decision tasks three times each: once with no intervention, once sucking on a large lollipop to heighten oral sensation, and once after swishing lidocaine (a local anesthetic) to numb the mouth. 44

In the first task, they determined if letter strings formed real words (e.g., green button for 'cat', red for 'xat'). The second assessed if strings sounded like real words phonologically (e.g., 'bloo' as yes for 'blue'). Researchers measured reaction times, accuracy, and brain connectivity, revealing nuanced effects from oral perturbations. 78

Participants in University of Alberta reading study undergoing oral numbing with lidocaine and fNIRS brain scanning

Results Spotlight: Speed Gains from Sensory Disruption

Key findings showed that lidocaine numbing reduced supramarginal gyrus activity and boosted silent reading speed in the phonological task for some participants, with no drop in accuracy. Conversely, the lollipop amplified sensory input and brain activity. These modest effects indicate oral somatosensory signals influence reading efficiency and inter-regional brain connectivity. 44 94

  • Lidocaine condition: Faster reaction times in phonological decisions, lower sensory cortex activation.
  • Lollipop condition: Heightened activity, no behavioral speed change.
  • Control: Baseline performance.

Holmes notes, "Oral somatosensory input influences reading-related brain activity," but emphasizes the subtle nature requires further validation. 44

Somatosensory Feedback: The Hidden Link in Silent Reading

Somatosensory feedback refers to sensory information from the mouth, tongue, and lips during reading. Even silently, the brain simulates articulation, sending proprioceptive signals upward. Mismatches (e.g., unfamiliar words) trigger corrections via motor areas. Numbing interrupts this loop, potentially streamlining processing by reducing 'noise'. 44 57

Prior research supports this: The print-to-speech model posits sight, sound, and touch integrate for literacy. UAlberta's work builds on Jacqueline Cummine's MRI studies mapping reading pathways.Cummine's MRI insights 111

Dyslexia Landscape in Canada: Stats and Struggles

Dyslexia, a neurobiological learning disability affecting accurate, fluent word recognition, impacts 5-10% of Canadians—roughly 750,000 school-aged children and 5 million adults. In 2022, Statistics Canada reported 5.6% of those 15+ (1.6 million) have learning disabilities, with dyslexia comprising 80%. 65 68

Challenges include slower reading speeds (20-50% below peers), phonological deficits, and higher dropout risks. Current interventions like structured literacy (Orton-Gillingham) emphasize phonics, but motor-speech links are underexplored. 66

Bridging to Dyslexia Interventions: Promising Horizons

This study posits expanded roles for speech-language pathologists (SLPs) in dyslexia care, targeting somatosensory-speech-reading ties. Future trials will test on dyslexic adults via ongoing NCT05854082, using lidocaine/motor tasks on unfamiliar words.ClinicalTrials.gov study 93

Potential therapies: Temporary numbing aids, tactile tools mimicking feedback, or SLP-led articulation drills. Aligns with multisensory approaches proven effective. 84

Professor Jacqueline Cummine, Canada Research Chair in Neuroscience of Literacy at University of Alberta

Spotlight on UAlberta Researchers Driving Change

Mitchell Holmes, PhD candidate, bridges speech and reading silos. Supervisor Jacqueline Cummine, Canada Research Chair in Neuroscience of Literacy, uses advanced imaging for literacy insights. Their Faculty of Rehabilitation Medicine team advances child health, neuroscience.Cummine profile 103

For aspiring academics, opportunities abound in communication sciences. Explore higher ed faculty jobs or academic CV tips.

Ongoing Trials and Evolving Research Agenda

Beyond this pilot, UAlberta recruits dyslexic adults for expanded testing. Funded by NSERC, work integrates with Cummine's print-to-speech model emphasizing sensory roles. 44

  • Phase next: Dyslexia cohort with detailed fNIRS/MRI.
  • Long-term: Pediatric applications, classroom tools.
  • Collaborations: WCHRI, Dyslexia Canada.

Educational Ripple Effects Across Canadian Universities

In Canada, universities like UAlberta lead rehab sciences. Implications: Updated SLP curricula, dyslexia screening protocols. Stakeholders—educators, parents—gain evidence for holistic interventions. Ties to higher ed career paths in research assistance.Research assistant roles.

Stats show dyslexia boosts mental health risks (40% in kids), underscoring urgency. 67

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Future Outlook: From Lab to Literacy Revolution?

Preliminary yet provocative, this research heralds sensory-targeted therapies. Watch for trial results, scalable tools. For educators/researchers, positions in lecturer jobs or professor jobs at Canadian unis advance such frontiers.

In summary, UAlberta's mouth numbing discovery reframes reading as embodied, promising hope for dyslexia's millions. Professionals can contribute via Rate My Professor, higher ed jobs, or career advice. Stay tuned for breakthroughs.

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Dr. Liam Whitaker

Contributing writer for AcademicJobs, specializing in higher education trends, faculty development, and academic career guidance. Passionate about advancing excellence in teaching and research.

Frequently Asked Questions

🧠What is the University of Alberta mouth numbing reading study?

The study, led by Mitchell Holmes and Jacqueline Cummine, tested how lidocaine numbing and lollipop sucking affect silent reading speed and brain activity in proficient readers. Published in Brain and Language.

📖How does numbing the mouth improve reading speed?

By disrupting oral somatosensory feedback, it reduces supramarginal gyrus activity, streamlining phonological processing without accuracy loss. Read the full article.

🔬Does this study apply to people with dyslexia?

Preliminary; future trials target dyslexics. Ongoing clinical trial NCT05854082 tests lidocaine on unfamiliar words in dyslexia adults.

👩‍🏫Who are the key researchers involved?

PhD candidate Mitchell Holmes (lead) and Prof. Jacqueline Cummine, Canada Research Chair in Neuroscience of Literacy at UAlberta's Faculty of Rehabilitation Medicine.

📊What is the prevalence of dyslexia in Canada?

5-10% of population; ~750,000 school kids, 5M adults. 80% of learning disabilities.

🧬How was brain activity measured?

Using fNIRS to track supramarginal gyrus and connectivity during lexical tasks.

🚀What are next steps for this research?

Dyslexia-specific studies, pediatric extensions, SLP integrations.

🗣️Can speech therapy help dyslexia based on this?

Yes, enhances motor-speech links. Complements phonics with somatosensory focus.

💼Career opportunities from this research area?

SLP, research assistant, faculty in rehab med. Check higher ed jobs.

🔗Where to learn more about UAlberta's work?

Faculty of Rehabilitation Medicine site, Dyslexia Canada. Rate profs at Rate My Professor.

Is the effect significant for everyday reading?

Modest in proficient readers; potential larger in dyslexia. Needs replication.