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一项纵向研究调查了(有阅读障碍家族风险的)儿童对语音包络调制率的神经处理。

A longitudinal study investigating neural processing of speech envelope modulation rates in children with (a family risk for) dyslexia.

机构信息

Research Group Experimental ORL, Department of Neurosciences, KU Leuven - University of Leuven, Leuven, Belgium; Parenting and Special Education Research Unit, Faculty of Psychology and Educational Sciences, KU Leuven - University of Leuven, Leuven, Belgium.

Research Group Experimental ORL, Department of Neurosciences, KU Leuven - University of Leuven, Leuven, Belgium; Parenting and Special Education Research Unit, Faculty of Psychology and Educational Sciences, KU Leuven - University of Leuven, Leuven, Belgium.

出版信息

Cortex. 2017 Aug;93:206-219. doi: 10.1016/j.cortex.2017.05.007. Epub 2017 May 25.

Abstract

Recent evidence suggests that a fundamental deficit in the synchronization of neural oscillations to temporal information in speech may underlie phonological processing problems in dyslexia. Since previous studies were performed cross-sectionally in school-aged children or adults, developmental aspects of neural auditory processing in relation to reading acquisition and dyslexia remain to be investigated. The present longitudinal study followed 68 children during development from pre-reader (5 years old) to beginning reader (7 years old) and more advanced reader (9 years old). Thirty-six children had a family risk for dyslexia and 14 children eventually developed dyslexia. EEG recordings of auditory steady-state responses to 4 and 20 Hz modulations, corresponding to syllable and phoneme rates, were collected at each point in time. Our results demonstrate an increase in neural synchronization to phoneme-rate modulations around the onset of reading acquisition. This effect was negatively correlated with later reading and phonological skills, indicating that children who exhibit the largest increase in neural synchronization to phoneme rates, develop the poorest reading and phonological skills. Accordingly, neural synchronization to phoneme-rate modulations was found to be significantly higher in beginning and more advanced readers with dyslexia. We found no developmental effects regarding neural synchronization to syllable rates, nor any effects of a family risk for dyslexia. Altogether, our findings suggest that the onset of reading instruction coincides with an increase in neural responsiveness to phoneme-rate modulations, and that the extent of this increase is related to (the outcome of) reading development. Hereby, dyslexic children persistently demonstrate atypically high neural synchronization to phoneme rates from the beginning of reading acquisition onwards.

摘要

最近的证据表明,语音中时间信息的神经振荡同步的基本缺陷可能是阅读障碍者语音处理问题的基础。由于之前的研究是在学龄儿童或成年人中进行的横断面研究,因此与阅读习得和阅读障碍有关的神经听觉处理的发展方面仍有待研究。本纵向研究在发展过程中对 68 名儿童进行了跟踪,这些儿童从预读者(5 岁)到开始读者(7 岁)和更高级读者(9 岁)。36 名儿童有阅读障碍的家族风险,14 名儿童最终发展为阅读障碍。在每个时间点采集了对 4 和 20 Hz 调制的听觉稳态反应的 EEG 记录,分别对应于音节和音素率。我们的结果表明,在阅读习得开始时,对音素率调制的神经同步性增加。这种效应与后来的阅读和语音技能呈负相关,表明对音素率的神经同步性增加最大的儿童,发展出最差的阅读和语音技能。因此,在阅读障碍的开始和更高级的读者中,对音素率调制的神经同步性明显更高。我们没有发现关于对音节率的神经同步性的发展影响,也没有发现阅读障碍家族风险的影响。总的来说,我们的发现表明,阅读教学的开始伴随着对音素率调制的神经反应性的增加,而这种增加的程度与阅读发展的结果有关。因此,阅读障碍儿童从阅读习得开始就一直表现出对音素率的神经同步性异常高。

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