Molinaro Nicola, Lizarazu Mikel, Lallier Marie, Bourguignon Mathieu, Carreiras Manuel
BCBL, Basque Center on Cognition, Brain and Language, San Sebastian, Spain.
Ikerbasque, Basque Foundation for Science, Bilbao, Spain.
Hum Brain Mapp. 2016 Aug;37(8):2767-83. doi: 10.1002/hbm.23206. Epub 2016 Apr 7.
Developmental dyslexia is a reading disorder often characterized by reduced awareness of speech units. Whether the neural source of this phonological disorder in dyslexic readers results from the malfunctioning of the primary auditory system or damaged feedback communication between higher-order phonological regions (i.e., left inferior frontal regions) and the auditory cortex is still under dispute. Here we recorded magnetoencephalographic (MEG) signals from 20 dyslexic readers and 20 age-matched controls while they were listening to ∼10-s-long spoken sentences. Compared to controls, dyslexic readers had (1) an impaired neural entrainment to speech in the delta band (0.5-1 Hz); (2) a reduced delta synchronization in both the right auditory cortex and the left inferior frontal gyrus; and (3) an impaired feedforward functional coupling between neural oscillations in the right auditory cortex and the left inferior frontal regions. This shows that during speech listening, individuals with developmental dyslexia present reduced neural synchrony to low-frequency speech oscillations in primary auditory regions that hinders higher-order speech processing steps. The present findings, thus, strengthen proposals assuming that improper low-frequency acoustic entrainment affects speech sampling. This low speech-brain synchronization has the strong potential to cause severe consequences for both phonological and reading skills. Interestingly, the reduced speech-brain synchronization in dyslexic readers compared to normal readers (and its higher-order consequences across the speech processing network) appears preserved through the development from childhood to adulthood. Thus, the evaluation of speech-brain synchronization could possibly serve as a diagnostic tool for early detection of children at risk of dyslexia. Hum Brain Mapp 37:2767-2783, 2016. © 2016 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
发育性阅读障碍是一种阅读障碍,其特征通常是对语音单位的意识减弱。阅读障碍读者中这种语音障碍的神经根源是源于初级听觉系统功能失调,还是高阶语音区域(即左下额叶区域)与听觉皮层之间的反馈通信受损,目前仍存在争议。在此,我们记录了20名阅读障碍读者和20名年龄匹配的对照组在听约10秒长的口语句子时的脑磁图(MEG)信号。与对照组相比,阅读障碍读者存在:(1)在δ频段(0.5 - 1赫兹)对语音的神经夹带受损;(2)右侧听觉皮层和左侧下额回的δ同步性降低;(3)右侧听觉皮层与左下额叶区域神经振荡之间的前馈功能耦合受损。这表明在言语聆听过程中,发育性阅读障碍个体在初级听觉区域对低频语音振荡的神经同步性降低,这会阻碍高阶言语处理步骤。因此,本研究结果强化了这样的观点,即低频声学夹带不当会影响言语采样。这种言语 - 脑同步性降低很可能对语音和阅读技能都造成严重后果。有趣的是,与正常读者相比,阅读障碍读者言语 - 脑同步性降低(及其在言语处理网络中的高阶后果)在从儿童到成人的发育过程中似乎一直存在。因此,言语 - 脑同步性评估可能作为早期检测有阅读障碍风险儿童的诊断工具。《人类大脑图谱》37:2767 - 2783,2016年。© 2016威利期刊公司。