Results - Validated by Science
Scientific Learning has compiled one of the largest databases of measured user results in education today, including skills tested with specific student populations in multiple countries.
Link to a compilation of scientific studies, white papers and articles written about Fast ForWord over the past decade. It is a large pdf document that is best browsed through to print selected pages.
Links to a studies conducted by Scientific Learning on the following topics:
The Fast ForWord programs are based on over 30 years of scientific research into the way the brain learns.
The programs evolved from the work of noted research scientists Drs. Michael Merzenich and Bill Jenkins at the University of California, San Francisco, and Drs. Paula Tallal and Steven Miller at Rutgers University.
Their research collaboration resulted in several key findings.
First, they established that the core cognitive and linguistic attributes (Memory, Attention, Processing and Sequencing) that define a student’s ability to benefit from classroom instruction can be successfully improved through intensive intervention using advanced technologies. For example, with the help of computers, the complex speech sounds in sentences -- such as phonemes -- could be slowed down and digitally enhanced so that they could be easily differentiated.
The scientists discovered that by using this acoustically modified speech technology in an intensive, adaptive product, students could build a wide range of critical language and reading skills such as phonological awareness, phonemic awareness, fluency, vocabulary, comprehension, decoding, syntax, grammar, and other skills that had previously been inaccessible to them.
Dr. Merzenich, who is a member of the National Academy of Sciences and is also the Chief Scientific Officer for Posit Science. Dr. Jenkins (currently Senior Vice President of Product Development at Scientific Learning) are internationally known for their research in the science of brain plasticity, which is the concept that the brain changes as we learn new skills.
Dr Paula Tallal, Dr Steven Miller
Drs. Tallal and Miller are experts in research on the neurological basis of language and reading development and their disorders, such as dyslexia.
Dr. Tallal is currently co-director of the Center for Molecular and Behavioral Neuroscience at Rutgers and an active participant on many scientific advisory boards and government committees for both developmental language disorders and learning disabilities. She has published over 150 papers on the topic of language and learning and is the recipient of national and international honors.
Dr. Miller, currently Senior Vice President of Research at Scientific Learning, has extensive experience in organising clinical research studies and conducting longitudinal studies of children who have language and reading problems.
Read more about the Science Fundamentals and specific foundational Fast ForWord research.
Some specific foundational research:
1. Temple E., Deutsch GK, Poldrack RA, Miller SL, Tallal P, Merzenich MM, Gabrieli JDE (2003). Neural deficits in children with dyslexia ameliorated by behavioral remediation: evidence from functional MRI. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 100 (5):2860-2865.
2. Tallal P (2000). The Science of Literacy: From the Laboratory to the Classroom. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 97 (6): 2402-2404.
3. Miller SL, Linn N, Tallal P, Merzenich MM, Jenkins WM (1999). Acoustically modified speech and language training: A relationship between auditory word discrimination training and measures of language outcomes, Reeducation Orthophonique, 197: 159-182.
4. Miller SL, Delaney TV, Tallal P, (1998). Speech and other central auditory processes: insights from cognitive neuroscience, in LR Squire & SM Kosslyn (eds.) Findings and Current Opinion in Cognitive Neuroscience. MIT Press, Boston, MA.
5. Temple E., Poldrack RA, Protopapas A, Nagarajan S, Salz T, Tallal P, Merzenich M.M, Gabrieli JDE. (2000). Disruption of the neural response to rapid acoustic stimuli in dyslexia: evidence from functional MRI. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 97 (25):13907-13912.
6. Merzenich MM, Jenkins WM, Johnston P, Schreiner CE, Miller SL, & Tallal P (1996). Temporal processing deficits of language-learning impaired children ameliorated by training. Science, 271:77-80.
7. Tallal P, Miller SL, Bedi G, Byma G, Wang X, Nagarajan SS, Schreiner C, Jenkins WM, Merzenich MM (1996). Language comprehension in language-learning impaired children improved with acoustically modified speech. Science 271:81-84.
First, they established that the core cognitive and linguistic attributes (Memory, Attention, Processing and Sequencing) that define a student’s ability to benefit from classroom instruction can be successfully improved through intensive intervention using advanced technologies. For example, with the help of computers, the complex speech sounds in sentences -- such as phonemes -- could be slowed down and digitally enhanced so that they could be easily differentiated.
The scientists discovered that by using this acoustically modified speech technology in an intensive, adaptive product, students could build a wide range of critical language and reading skills such as phonological awareness, phonemic awareness, fluency, vocabulary, comprehension, decoding, syntax, grammar, and other skills that had previously been inaccessible to them.
Dr. Merzenich, who is a member of the National Academy of Sciences and is also the Chief Scientific Officer for Posit Science. Dr. Jenkins (currently Senior Vice President of Product Development at Scientific Learning) are internationally known for their research in the science of brain plasticity, which is the concept that the brain changes as we learn new skills.
Dr Paula Tallal, Dr Steven Miller
Drs. Tallal and Miller are experts in research on the neurological basis of language and reading development and their disorders, such as dyslexia.
Dr. Tallal is currently co-director of the Center for Molecular and Behavioral Neuroscience at Rutgers and an active participant on many scientific advisory boards and government committees for both developmental language disorders and learning disabilities. She has published over 150 papers on the topic of language and learning and is the recipient of national and international honors.
Dr. Miller, currently Senior Vice President of Research at Scientific Learning, has extensive experience in organising clinical research studies and conducting longitudinal studies of children who have language and reading problems.
Read more about the Science Fundamentals and specific foundational Fast ForWord research.
Some specific foundational research:
1. Temple E., Deutsch GK, Poldrack RA, Miller SL, Tallal P, Merzenich MM, Gabrieli JDE (2003). Neural deficits in children with dyslexia ameliorated by behavioral remediation: evidence from functional MRI. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 100 (5):2860-2865.
2. Tallal P (2000). The Science of Literacy: From the Laboratory to the Classroom. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 97 (6): 2402-2404.
3. Miller SL, Linn N, Tallal P, Merzenich MM, Jenkins WM (1999). Acoustically modified speech and language training: A relationship between auditory word discrimination training and measures of language outcomes, Reeducation Orthophonique, 197: 159-182.
4. Miller SL, Delaney TV, Tallal P, (1998). Speech and other central auditory processes: insights from cognitive neuroscience, in LR Squire & SM Kosslyn (eds.) Findings and Current Opinion in Cognitive Neuroscience. MIT Press, Boston, MA.
5. Temple E., Poldrack RA, Protopapas A, Nagarajan S, Salz T, Tallal P, Merzenich M.M, Gabrieli JDE. (2000). Disruption of the neural response to rapid acoustic stimuli in dyslexia: evidence from functional MRI. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 97 (25):13907-13912.
6. Merzenich MM, Jenkins WM, Johnston P, Schreiner CE, Miller SL, & Tallal P (1996). Temporal processing deficits of language-learning impaired children ameliorated by training. Science, 271:77-80.
7. Tallal P, Miller SL, Bedi G, Byma G, Wang X, Nagarajan SS, Schreiner C, Jenkins WM, Merzenich MM (1996). Language comprehension in language-learning impaired children improved with acoustically modified speech. Science 271:81-84.
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