AI for Dyslexia
AI as your literacy co-pilot. Reading assistance, writing support, summarization, and turning text-heavy tasks into manageable ones.
Why AI is Revolutionary for Dyslexia
AI removes text-processing barriers so your visual-spatial strengths can shine
AI acts as a text-processing layer between you and written content. It can read for you, write for you, and most importantly—translate between the visual/spatial way dyslexic minds think and the text-based format the world demands. You focus on ideas; AI handles the encoding.
Reading Assistance
AI summarizes, simplifies, and extracts key information so you don't have to wade through walls of text.
Writing Support
AI transforms your ideas into polished text, catching spelling errors and organizing your thoughts.
Voice Integration
Speak your ideas, let AI transcribe and organize them. Bypass text input entirely.
Format Conversion
AI converts between formats—dense text to bullet points, paragraphs to visual structures.
AI & Dyslexia Research (2025)
Verified .gov and .edu research on AI applications for dyslexia
Using AI Responsibly
AI tools are powerful assistants, but always verify important information. Use AI as a starting point for reading support and writing assistance—then confirm details with trusted sources before acting on them.
Practical Guides & University Resources
Verified .edu and .gov guides for AI and dyslexia support
Getting the Most from AI with Dyslexia
When using AI as a reading and writing support tool: use voice input instead of typing, always ask for bullet points and simple language, request AI to rewrite from scratch rather than editing your draft, and save prompts that work well so you can reuse them later without rewriting.
Explore More
Continue your AI + neurodivergence journey
Sources
- AI to Screen for Language and Speech Disorders Among Children — University at Buffalo (April 2025)
- Key to Spotting Dyslexia Early Could Be AI-Powered Handwriting Analysis — University at Buffalo (May 2025)
- How AI Will Help Students with Dyslexia — University of Michigan (Aug 2025)
- AI-Based Interventions for Students with Learning Disabilities: Systematic Review — PMC (2025)