Bakos Sarolta, Landerl Karin, Bartling Jürgen, Schulte-Körne Gerd, Moll Kristina
Department of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry and Psychotherapy, University Hospital Munich Munich, Germany.
Institute of Psychology, University of Graz Graz, Austria.
Front Hum Neurosci. 2017 Mar 9;11:116. doi: 10.3389/fnhum.2017.00116. eCollection 2017.
The reading and spelling deficits characteristic of developmental dyslexia (dyslexia) have been related to problems in phonological processing and in learning associations between letters and speech-sounds. Even when children with dyslexia have learned the letters and their corresponding speech sounds, letter-speech sound associations might still be less automatized compared to children with age-adequate literacy skills. In order to examine automaticity in letter-speech sound associations and to overcome some of the disadvantages associated with the frequently used visual-auditory oddball paradigm, we developed a novel electrophysiological letter-speech sound interference paradigm. This letter-speech sound interference paradigm was applied in a group of 9-year-old children with dyslexia ( = 36) and a group of typically developing (TD) children of similar age ( = 37). Participants had to indicate whether two letters look visually the same. In the incongruent condition (e.g., the letter pair A-a) there was a conflict between the visual information and the automatically activated phonological information; although the visual appearance of the two letters is different, they are both associated with the same speech sound. This conflict resulted in slower response times (RTs) in the incongruent than in the congruent (e.g., the letter pair A-e) condition. Furthermore, in the TD control group, the conflict resulted in fast and strong event-related potential (ERP) effects reflected in less negative N1 amplitudes and more positive conflict slow potentials (cSP) in the incongruent than in the congruent condition. However, the dyslexic group did not show any conflict-related ERP effects, implying that letter-speech sound associations are less automatized in this group. Furthermore, we examined general visual conflict processing in a control visual interference task, using false fonts. The conflict in this experiment was based purely on the visual similarity of the presented objects. Visual conflict resulted in slower RTs, less negative N2 amplitudes and more positive cSP in both groups. Thus, on a general, basic level, visual conflict processing does not seem to be affected in children with dyslexia.
发育性阅读障碍(诵读困难)的典型阅读和拼写缺陷与语音处理问题以及学习字母与语音之间的关联存在关联。即使患有诵读困难的儿童已经学会了字母及其相应的语音,但与具备适当读写能力的儿童相比,字母 - 语音关联可能仍未充分自动化。为了研究字母 - 语音关联的自动化程度,并克服与常用的视觉 - 听觉oddball范式相关的一些缺点,我们开发了一种新颖的电生理字母 - 语音干扰范式。这种字母 - 语音干扰范式应用于一组9岁的诵读困难儿童(n = 36)和一组年龄相仿的正常发育(TD)儿童(n = 37)。参与者必须指出两个字母在视觉上是否相同。在不一致条件下(例如,字母对A - a),视觉信息与自动激活的语音信息之间存在冲突;尽管两个字母的视觉外观不同,但它们都与相同的语音相关联。这种冲突导致不一致条件下的反应时间(RTs)比一致条件下(例如,字母对A - e)更慢。此外,在TD对照组中,这种冲突导致快速且强烈的事件相关电位(ERP)效应,表现为不一致条件下的N1波幅比一致条件下更不消极,冲突慢电位(cSP)更积极。然而,诵读困难组未显示任何与冲突相关的ERP效应,这意味着该组中字母 - 语音关联的自动化程度较低。此外,我们在一个使用伪字体的对照视觉干扰任务中研究了一般视觉冲突处理。该实验中的冲突纯粹基于所呈现对象的视觉相似性。视觉冲突导致两组的反应时间都变慢,N2波幅更不消极,cSP更积极。因此,在一般的基本层面上,诵读困难儿童的视觉冲突处理似乎未受影响。