Although the generality of dyslexia and its devastating
effects on the individual's life are widely acknowledged,
its precursors and associated neural mechanisms are poorly
understood. One of the two major competing views maintains
that dyslexia is based primarily on a deficit in linguistic
processing, whereas the other view suggests a more general
processing deficit, one involving the perception of temporal
information. Here we present evidence in favor of the latter
view by showing that the neural discrimination of temporal
information within complex tone patterns fails in dyslexic
adults. This failure can be traced to early cortical mechanisms
that process auditory information independently of attention.