Department of Neuropsychology, Max Planck Institute for Human Cognitive and Brain Sciences, Leipzig, Germany; Graduate School of Information Science and Technology, The University of Tokyo, Tokyo, Japan; Center for Brain, Mind and KANSEI Sciences Research, Hiroshima University, 1-2-3, Kasumi, Minami-ku, Hiroshima city, Hiroshima, Japan.
Department of Psychosocial Science, University of Bergen, Bergen, Norway.
Biol Psychol. 2023 Jul;181:108592. doi: 10.1016/j.biopsycho.2023.108592. Epub 2023 May 31.
The human brain extracts statistical regularities from the surrounding environment in a process called statistical learning. Behavioural evidence suggests that developmental dyslexia affects statistical learning. However, surprisingly few studies have assessed how developmental dyslexia affects the neural processing underlying this type of learning. We used electroencephalography to explore the neural correlates of an important aspect of statistical learning - sensitivity to transitional probabilities - in individuals with developmental dyslexia. Adults diagnosed with developmental dyslexia (n = 17) and controls (n = 19) were exposed to a continuous stream of sound triplets. Every so often, a triplet ending had a low transitional probability given the triplet's first two sounds ("statistical deviants"). Furthermore, every so often a triplet ending was presented from a deviant location ("acoustic deviants"). We examined mismatch negativity elicited by statistical deviants (sMMN), and MMN elicited by location deviants (i.e., acoustic changes). Acoustic deviants elicited a MMN which was larger in the control group than in the developmental dyslexia group. Statistical deviants elicited a small, yet significant, sMMN in the control group, but not in the developmental dyslexia group. However, the difference between the groups was not significant. Our findings indicate that the neural mechanisms underlying pre-attentive acoustic change detection and implicit statistical auditory learning are both affected in developmental dyslexia.
人类大脑通过一个被称为统计学习的过程,从周围环境中提取统计规律。行为证据表明,发展性阅读障碍会影响统计学习。然而,令人惊讶的是,很少有研究评估发展性阅读障碍如何影响这种类型学习的神经处理。我们使用脑电图来探索发展性阅读障碍个体中统计学习的一个重要方面的神经相关性 - 对过渡概率的敏感性。被诊断患有发展性阅读障碍的成年人(n=17)和对照组(n=19)暴露于连续的声音三重奏中。每隔一段时间,一个三重奏的结尾会根据三重奏的前两个声音出现低过渡概率(“统计偏差”)。此外,每隔一段时间,一个三重奏的结尾会从偏差位置呈现(“声学偏差”)。我们检查了由统计偏差引起的失匹配负波(sMMN),以及由位置偏差引起的 MMN(即声学变化)。声学偏差引起的 MMN 在对照组中比在发展性阅读障碍组中更大。统计偏差在对照组中引起了一个小但显著的 sMMN,但在发展性阅读障碍组中没有。然而,两组之间的差异并不显著。我们的研究结果表明,发展性阅读障碍会影响无意识的声学变化检测和隐含的统计听觉学习的神经机制。