Lyon Neuroscience Research Center, CRNL, CNRS, UMR 5292, INSERM U1028, F-69000 Lyon, France; University of Lyon 1, F-69000 Lyon, France; University of Lyon 2, CNRS, UMR 5596, F-69000 Lyon, France.
Lyon Neuroscience Research Center, CRNL, CNRS, UMR 5292, INSERM U1028, F-69000 Lyon, France; University of Lyon 1, F-69000 Lyon, France; University of Lyon 2, CNRS, UMR 5596, F-69000 Lyon, France.
J Exp Child Psychol. 2020 Sep;197:104885. doi: 10.1016/j.jecp.2020.104885. Epub 2020 Jun 16.
Research has shown that regular rhythmic primes improve grammaticality judgments of subsequently presented sentences compared with irregular rhythmic primes. In the theoretical framework of dynamic attending, regular rhythmic primes are suggested to act as driving rhythms to entrain neural oscillations. These entrained oscillations then sustain once the prime has finished, engendering a state of global enhanced activation that facilitates the processing of subsequent sentences. Up to now, this global rhythmic priming effect has largely been shown with primes that are approximately 30 s or more. To investigate whether shorter primes also facilitate grammaticality judgments, two experiments were run on two groups of children aged 7 to 9 years (Ms = 8.67 and 8.58 years, respectively). Prime durations were 8 and 16 s in Experiment 1, and they were 16 and 32 s in Experiment 2. Rhythmic priming was observed in Experiment 2 for 32-s primes, as observed previously. Furthermore, positive correlations were found between reading age and performance level after regular primes for both 8-s and 16-s primes in Experiment 1 and for 32-s primes in Experiment 2. In addition, the benefit of the regular primes increased with chronological age for the 32-s primes in Experiment 2. The findings suggest that (at least) 32-s primes are optimal in global rhythmic priming studies when testing children in the current age range and that results may be modulated by chronological age and reading age. Results are discussed in relation to dynamic attending theory, neural oscillation strength, developmental considerations, and implications for rhythmic stimulation in language rehabilitation.
研究表明,与不规则节奏启动相比,有规律的节奏启动可提高随后呈现的句子的语法判断。在动态注意的理论框架中,有规律的节奏启动被认为是驱动节奏,可使神经振荡同步。一旦启动结束,这些同步的振荡会持续下去,产生一种全局增强激活的状态,从而促进后续句子的处理。到目前为止,这种全局节奏启动效应主要是通过大约 30 秒或更长的启动来展示的。为了研究较短的启动是否也能促进语法判断,我们在两组年龄为 7 至 9 岁的儿童中进行了两项实验(M 值分别为 8.67 岁和 8.58 岁)。在实验 1 中,启动时长为 8 秒和 16 秒,在实验 2 中,启动时长为 16 秒和 32 秒。实验 2 观察到 32 秒的启动有节奏启动效应,这与之前的观察结果一致。此外,在实验 1 中,无论是 8 秒还是 16 秒的规则启动后,阅读年龄与表现水平之间都存在正相关关系,而在实验 2 中,32 秒的规则启动后也存在这种关系。此外,在实验 2 中,32 秒的规则启动的优势随着实际年龄的增加而增加。这些发现表明,在当前年龄范围内测试儿童时,(至少)32 秒的启动在全局节奏启动研究中是最佳的,并且结果可能会受到实际年龄和阅读年龄的调节。结果将结合动态注意理论、神经振荡强度、发展考虑因素以及对语言康复中节奏刺激的影响进行讨论。