Educational Neuroimaging Group, Faculty of Biomedical Engineering, Haifa, Israel.
Faculty of Education in Science and Technology, Haifa, Israel.
PLoS One. 2023 May 18;18(5):e0283863. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0283863. eCollection 2023.
Reading is considered a non-intuitive, cognitively demanding ability requiring synchronization between several neural networks supporting visual, language processing and higher-order abilities. With the involvement of technology in our everyday life, reading from a screen has become widely used. Several studies point to challenges in processing written materials from the screen due to changes in attention allocation when reading from a screen compared to reading from a printed paper. The current study examined the differences in brain activation when reading from a screen compared to reading from a printed paper focusing on spectral power related to attention in fifteen 6-8-year-old children. Using an electroencephalogram, children read two different age-appropriate texts, without illustrations, presented randomly on the screen and on a printed paper. Data were analyzed using spectral analyses in brain regions related to language, visual processing, and cognitive control, focusing on theta vs. beta waveforms. Results indicated that while reading from a printed paper was accompanied by higher energy in high-frequency bands (beta, gamma), reading from the screen was manifested by a higher power in the lower frequency bands (alpha, theta). Higher theta compared to the beta ratio, representing challenges in allocating attention to a given task, was found for the screen reading compared to the printed paper reading condition. Also, a significant negative correlation was found between differences in theta/beta ratio for screen vs paper reading and accuracy level in the age-normalized Sky-Search task measuring attention and a positive correlation with performance time. These results provide neurobiological support for the greater cognitive load and reduced focused attention during screen-based compared to print-based reading and suggest a different reliance on attention resources for the two conditions in children.
阅读被认为是一种非直观的、认知要求高的能力,需要几个支持视觉、语言处理和高级能力的神经网络之间的同步。随着技术在我们日常生活中的广泛应用,从屏幕上阅读已经变得非常普遍。由于与从打印纸上阅读相比,从屏幕上阅读时注意力的分配发生了变化,因此有几项研究指出在处理屏幕上的书面材料时存在挑战。本研究通过比较十五名 6-8 岁儿童在从屏幕和打印纸上阅读时与注意力相关的频谱功率,来检查从屏幕上阅读与从打印纸上阅读时大脑激活的差异。使用脑电图,孩子们阅读了两个不同的、适合年龄的文本,没有插图,随机显示在屏幕和打印纸上。数据使用与语言、视觉处理和认知控制相关的脑区的频谱分析进行分析,重点关注theta 与 beta 波型。结果表明,从打印纸上阅读时伴随着高频带(beta、gamma)的更高能量,而从屏幕上阅读时则表现为低频带(alpha、theta)的更高功率。与从打印纸上阅读相比,从屏幕上阅读时theta 与 beta 的比值更高,这代表着在分配注意力方面的挑战,表明在屏幕阅读与打印纸阅读条件下,注意力分配存在差异。此外,在屏幕阅读与打印纸阅读之间的 theta/beta 比值差异与注意力和 Sky-Search 任务(测量注意力)的归一化年龄准确率之间存在显著的负相关,与表现时间之间存在正相关。这些结果为在基于屏幕的阅读与基于打印的阅读相比,认知负荷更大且注意力集中程度降低提供了神经生物学支持,并表明在儿童中,两种情况下对注意力资源的依赖程度不同。