Quote:
Originally Posted by doubleshuffle
The reasoning is that people with dyslexia often have difficulty perceiving the letters as stable and fixed in their spots, so the heavier lower part is supposed to help keep the letters "in place". Didn't work on the dyslexics I tried it on, but my sample has been very small so far (two, to be precise...)
Any dyslexics on the board here who could give their impression of those Dyslexic fonts?
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Horrible! The thing with Dyslexia is no cases are alike. So there may be some out there that is does help but for me it hard to read and gives me headache. I think Trebuchet is one of the best I have found for me when it comes to my condition on eInk not so much on Tablets it renders quite differently for that I found Slab-Serif fonts work better like Amasis once it was resized and weight added. However when I am stressed or it's really acting up due to being tired then no font works I switch to audio books.