If you have dyslexia, learning basic reading, writing, and language skills can be a life-long struggle and a source of frustration. Dutch designer Christian Boer has stepped in to help dyslexic people ...
Most of the 15 to 20 percent of people in the United States who have a language-based disability suffer from dyslexia, a condition that makes reading and comprehension difficult. Those who suffer from ...
The marketers for a typeface called “Dyslexie” claim the font can make reading “easy and enjoyable for people with dyslexia.” The reasoning behind the font’s design is intriguing. But before you get ...
A Dutch designer has created a font specifically for people with dyslexia, intended to stop the text from performing alphabetic gymnastics like reversing or flipping over backwards when they’re trying ...
SHREVEPORT, La. (KTAL/KMSS) – Does someone you love have Dyslexia? If so, celebrate Dyslexia Awareness Day on Oct. 8th by sharing Promova’s Dyslexia Mode 2.0, an upgraded feature that uses a newly ...
Thomas Edison had it. So did Henry Ford and Charles Schwab. Richard Branson flaunts it, as do Barbara Corcoran, Kevin O'Leary and Daymond John, three of the Sharks on ABC's entrepreneurial competition ...
Reading can be very difficult for individuals with dyslexia. Some people have difficulty relating to this, and dyslexics sometimes find it similarly frustrating to explain what they experience when ...
One in five people have dyslexia, and it affects people who use both languages based on alphabets (such as English) or logographics (such as Mandarin, Korean, etc.), making it a worldwide issue.
Developer Abelardo Gonzalez has created an open-source font designed to help people with dyslexia read more easily. Dubbed OpenDyslexic, the font is currently available as a free download, in the form ...
Dyslexie varies the size and shape of each letter to make sure all words are recognisable. A heavy baseline - which means the bottom of each letter is thicker - also makes it less likely for a reader ...
Unlike most fonts, which prioritize easy and swift readability, graphic designer Daniel Britton's recent creation does just the opposite. Meant to raise awareness for dyslexia, the font strips letters ...
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