Auditory Neuroscience Laboratory, Department of Communication Sciences and Disorders, Northwestern University, Evanston, Illinois 60208, USA.
J Neurosci. 2013 Feb 20;33(8):3500-4. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.4205-12.2013.
Learning to read proceeds smoothly for most children, yet others struggle to translate verbal language into its written form. Poor readers often have a host of auditory, linguistic, and attention deficits, including abnormal neural representation of speech and inconsistent performance on psychoacoustic tasks. We hypothesize that this constellation of deficits associated with reading disorders arises from the human auditory system failing to respond to sound in a consistent manner, and that this inconsistency impinges upon the ability to relate phonology and orthography during reading. In support of this hypothesis, we show that poor readers have significantly more variable auditory brainstem responses to speech than do good readers, independent of resting neurophysiological noise levels. Thus, neural variability may be an underlying biological contributor to well established behavioral and neural deficits found in poor readers.
对于大多数孩子来说,学习阅读进展顺利,但也有一些孩子在将口头语言转化为书面形式时遇到困难。阅读困难的孩子通常存在一系列听觉、语言和注意力缺陷,包括言语的神经表示异常以及在心理声学任务上表现不一致。我们假设,与阅读障碍相关的这种缺陷组合是由于人类听觉系统不能以一致的方式对声音做出反应,并且这种不一致会影响阅读过程中语音和正字法之间的关系。为了支持这一假设,我们发现,与阅读能力较好的孩子相比,阅读能力较差的孩子对言语的听觉脑干反应具有更大的可变性,而与静息神经生理噪声水平无关。因此,神经可变性可能是阅读困难儿童中存在的已确立的行为和神经缺陷的一个潜在生物学原因。