eLife (Dec 2023)

Marginalising dyslexic researchers is bad for science

  • Helen Taylor,
  • Arash Zaghi,
  • Sara Rankin

DOI
https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.93980
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12

Abstract

Read online

Communication in the sciences is often based on text, which places researchers with dyslexia at a disadvantage. However, this means that science is missing out on the original insights and specific strengths in exploration that dyslexic researchers bring to their disciplines. Here we discuss how the scientific community can address the challenges that dyslexic researchers face, and how science stands to benefit as a result. We discuss this in the context of a new theoretical framework proposing the existence of complementary learning strategies that could play a key role in scientific progress, particularly with regard to accelerating innovation.

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