Child Neuropsychology Unit, Faculty of Psychology and Educational Sciences, University of Geneva, Switzerland.
Child Neuropsychology Unit, Faculty of Psychology and Educational Sciences, University of Geneva, Switzerland.
Epilepsy Behav. 2024 Apr;153:109720. doi: 10.1016/j.yebeh.2024.109720. Epub 2024 Feb 29.
Accelerated long-term forgetting has been studied and demonstrated in adults with epilepsy. In contrast, the question of long-term consolidation (delays > 1 day) in children with epilepsy shows conflicting results. However, childhood is a period of life in which the encoding and long-term storage of new words is essential for the development of knowledge and learning. The aim of this study was therefore to investigate long-term memory consolidation skills in children with self-limited epilepsy with centro-temporal spikes (SeLECTS), using a paradigm exploring new words encoding skills and their long-term consolidation over one-week delay. As lexical knowledge, working memory skills and executive/attentional skills has been shown to contribute to long-term memory/new word learning, we added standardized measures of oral language and executive/attentional functions to explore the involvement of these cognitive skills in new word encoding and consolidation. The results showed that children with SeLECTS needed more repetitions to encode new words, struggled to encode the phonological forms of words, and when they finally reached the level of the typically developing children, they retained what they had learned, but didn't show improved recall skills after a one-week delay, unlike the control participants. Lexical knowledge, verbal working memory skills and phonological skills contributed to encoding and/or recall abilities, and interference sensitivity appeared to be associated with the number of phonological errors during the pseudoword encoding phase. These results are consistent with the functional model linking working memory, phonology and vocabulary in a fronto-temporo-parietal network. As SeLECTS involves perisylvian dysfunction, the associations between impaired sequence storage (phonological working memory), phonological representation storage and new word learning are not surprising. This dual impairment in both encoding and long-term consolidation may result in large learning gap between children with and without epilepsy. Whether these results indicate differences in the sleep-induced benefits required for long-term consolidation or differences in the benefits of retrieval practice between the epilepsy group and healthy children remains open. As lexical development is associated with academic achievement and comprehension, the impact of such deficits in learning new words is certainly detrimental.
加速的长期遗忘已在癫痫成人中进行了研究和证明。相比之下,癫痫儿童的长期巩固(延迟> 1 天)问题显示出相互矛盾的结果。然而,儿童时期是一个对新单词的编码和长期存储对于知识和学习的发展至关重要的时期。因此,本研究的目的是通过探索新单词编码技能及其在一周延迟后的长期巩固的范例,研究具有中央颞部棘波的自限性癫痫儿童的长期记忆巩固技能。由于词汇知识、工作记忆技能和执行/注意力技能已被证明有助于长期记忆/新单词学习,我们添加了口头语言和执行/注意力功能的标准化测量,以探索这些认知技能在新单词编码和巩固中的参与。结果表明,具有中央颞部棘波的儿童需要更多的重复来编码新单词,他们难以编码单词的语音形式,并且当他们最终达到典型发育儿童的水平时,他们保留了所学的内容,但在一周的延迟后没有表现出改善的回忆技能,与对照组不同。词汇知识、口头工作记忆技能和语音技能有助于编码和/或回忆能力,干扰敏感性似乎与伪字编码阶段的语音错误数量有关。这些结果与将工作记忆、语音和词汇联系在一个额颞顶叶网络中的功能模型一致。由于中央颞部棘波涉及周围性脑功能障碍,因此序列存储(语音工作记忆)、语音表示存储和新单词学习之间的关联受损并不奇怪。这种编码和长期巩固的双重缺陷可能导致癫痫儿童和无癫痫儿童之间存在较大的学习差距。这些结果是否表明长期巩固所需的睡眠诱导益处或癫痫组和健康儿童之间检索练习益处的差异仍然存在。由于词汇发展与学业成绩和理解能力相关,因此学习新单词的这种缺陷肯定会造成损害。