Dyslexia Font and Style Guide



Quick Facts about Dyslexia Font and Styles:



There are several fonts that have been designed for the dyslexic reader including Dyslexie, Opendyslexic, Gill Dyslexic, Read Regular, Lexia Readable, and Sylexiad

Contrary to media hype, and even a Scientific American article about Dyslexie, no independent research has found that any font significantly improves reading speed or comprehension for dyslexics



A 2013 Spanish study found that Helvetica, Courier, Arial and Verdana were the best fonts for dyslexics, the same fonts of choice for many efficient readers



Lightly colored paper, 12-14 point sans serif font, and bolding of text for highlighting are commonly believed to be best for dyslexics



for highlighting are commonly believed to be best for dyslexics Glossy and bright white backgrounds, italics, ALL CAPS, and underlining have been found to impair reading for dyslexics



have been found to impair reading for dyslexics Dyslexics are always in style



Fonts Designed for Dyslexics



Below is a look at some of the major fonts developed for dyslexics, why they were developed, how they are supposed to work, and what the research (if any) has shown about them thus far.

Dyslexie

Background

Created by the Dutch, dyslexic, graphic designer Christian Boer in 2008 after difficulty studying for a final exam while at university. He aimed to create a font that would stop the letters from looking like they were spinning or moving.



The font is now free for personal use but has to be purchased for commercial use. Education and business licenses start at approximately $115 US (Fall 2014). Learn more at the Dyslexie Font website. The Dyslexie Font

Credit: studiostudio GRAPHIC DESIGN | dyslexie

Vocabulary The terms Font and Typeface are often used interchangeably, but in fact they have different meanings... Font: The delivery mechanism for printing. The medium

Typeface: Refers to the artistic design of the letters, numbers and symbols. The media. One sentence captures the distinction...."I like the typeface of that dyslexia font."





Unique Font Characteristics:

Heavier line thickness at the bottom of most characters intended to better anchor letters



Slight downward slant on the curvature of the letters. Letters such as 'c' or 'e' may gape slightly more, or slump slightly in one direction

Elongates or diminishes the stem on some letters such as 'h and 'n'



Thickens or bolds capital letters and punctuations, to better identify where sentences start or end



Adds space between letters and words

Research Findings:

A masters thesis by Renske de Leeuw of the University of Twente found Dyslexie had no effect on reading speed but found an overall reduction in reading errors. Dyslexie was compared only against Arial and the sample size for the study was just 43, including 21 dyslexic readers. Though often cited by the design studio, the study is essentially neutral on the font's benefit. Perhaps they think people don't actually read it.



Open Dyslexic



Background

OpenDyslexic was created by American Abelardo Gonzalez and released as a free and open source font in 2011. He said he was motivated by the fact that other similar fonts (read: Dyslexie) were unaffordable.

Similarities with the Dyslexie font resulted in some nasty emails from Dyslexie creator Christian Boer, but the font remains free and open source.

The OpenDyslexic Font is Definitely Similar to Dyslexie



Unique Font Characteristics



Letters have heavy weighted bottoms to indicate direction and help reinforce the line of text

The unique shapes of each letter can help prevent the perception of letters reversing or swapping places

Wider letter spacing than many fonts

Unique italic styling

Research Findings

The OpenDyslexia website itself ernestly notes that there have been no formal studies conducted on OpenDyslexic while pointing out that there exist studies on font features that have been incorporated into the font such as extra space between letters.



Other Dyslexia Fonts, in Brief



Gill Dyslexic



This dyslexia font was created by the designer of Dyslexie, Christian Boer. It's not clear why he created a second font, though the cost is apparently less, so it may have been to compete with the cheaper Open Dyslexic, but it aims to reduce the symmetry between letters, making them easier to distinguish.



Like Dyslexie, the base of each letter is heavier than most other fonts, helping to orient the letter correctly. A sample sentence is below.



Gill Dyslexic Sample



Read Regular Created by Natascha Frensch at the Royal College of Art in London, this dyslexia font avoids symmetrical mirroring much like Gill Dyslexic. It is not open source yet and apparently not for sale. At least one publisher is using it, but it's unclear how to go about getting the font. There is an e-mail address at her website if you want more information.

Read Regular is a Clean, Arial Like Font

Each character is designed to stand on its own and work together with its previous or next character. Ascenders (bdfhkl) and descenders (gjpqy) are longer than most fonts to ensure distinction. Spacing within the o, e, a and u is enhanced and the openings in e and g are kept from visually closing in.

I was unable to find any reference to research conducted on the font.

Lexia Readable

Designed by Keith Bates at K-Type and available for purchase at their website, Lexia Readable was designed as a more mature Comic Sans font, suitable for older readers (i.e. not just comic books). It was designed to be more legible at font sizes as small as 8 points.

The Lexia Readable Typeface is Airy and Open





The Regular and Bold weights are free for use without a license by individuals, educational and charitable organizations. For pay, licensed packages are also available

Long ascenders and descenders combine with generous letter spacing and asymmetrical lowercase b and d to help distinguish letters - features seen in Dyslexie and OpenDyslexic. No research was found to have been conducted on the font.

Sylexiad

Sylexiad is actually a collection of fonts designed by Dr. Robert Hillier, a Senior Lecturer at Norwich University College of Arts and sold at his website where he describes it as an 'ongoing design investigation'.

His PhD dissertation was conducted on the font, though focused mainly on reader preferences rather than reading speed or accuracy. Among his conclusions was that:

" for the majority of dyslexic readers tested it was the combination of handwritten style, uppercase forms, long ascenders and descenders, light weight, uniform strokes, perpendicular design and generous inter-word spacing that was preferred."



Sylexiad Sans Serif Font is Lighter Weight than Some Other Dyslexia Font



Why Dyslexia Font Failure is Actually Good News

The failure of new fonts to make a significant difference vindicates a whole body of research that found dyslexia to be an auditory and cognitive processing impairment, not a visual one.



It's largely a myth that dyslexics see letters reversed, flipped or moving. Only a minority have such a problem. Therefore we should not expect a dyslexia font to have much of an impact.



Remember that decoding letters and words into meaning is a cognitive process that takes place in your brain, not your eyes! The input matters, but processing trumps all.



Final Font Thought: Don't Fret



My own education in researching dyslexia font has lead me to the conclusion that fonts really don't matter much, so long as they are clean (sans serif) and have generous spacing between letters and words, but this is as true for dyslexics as efficient readers.



But by all means experiment with different fonts. Some people have been literally brought to tears by the freedom a new font provided but these are anecdotal accounts and probably exceptional circumstances.

There is no hard research demonstrating improved reading speed or comprehension for dyslexics from any font.



A lot of good intent and effort went into the creation of the fonts and the media has given them a lot of gab but something has been missing from the whole discussion: Science.

The cutting edge of dyslexia research is converging on the fact that dyslexia results from inefficient processing of words in the brain— the way that letters and words are manipulated, stored and retrieved.

How could a font result in new global patterns of neural processing? If you understand this limitation, fonts are almost a non-starter.

Much of the rational behind the fonts is actually based on myths about dyslexia—that dyslexia is a visual problem wherein readers reverse letters or spin them around or can't distinguish one letter from the next. This is not the case for most people with dyslexia, their problem lies in discriminating sounds, being able to manipulate phonemes, lack of short term memory and inability to remain focused.







Writing Styles and Media



General Dyslexia Information Styling Tips



Things to Do:

Left justify text

Choose a simple sans serif font like Arial or Helvetica



Use larger fonts and bolding to highlight text

to highlight text Use shorter sentences and paragraphs with ample line spacing

Use numbering and bullets

Use charts, graphs and other visual aids to present information

Use lightly coloured matte finish paper

Cream colours or pastels work well

Use black text on lighter backgrounds

Consider using audio text



Things to Avoid

underlining or using italics because this tends to make it more difficult to parse words into their constituent parts and sounds



or using italics because this tends to make it more difficult to parse words into their constituent parts and sounds words like former and latter, preceding, forthcoming or other terms associated with spatial or temporal sequencing

ALL CAPS. The letters tend to fuse together

acronyms and abbreviations

bright white paper or backgrounds on webpages

white text on black backgrounds, or at least not for the main body of text



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Photo Credits:

Beauty Brunette Model Reading Book: © Alexey Kuznetsov | Dreamstime

Pencils and Letters: © Chad Mcdermott | Dreamstime.com

