EVENT RELATED POTENTIALS RECORDED IN NORMAL AND DYSLEXIC SUBJECTS WHEN READING IN AND OUT OF CONTEXT

被引:1
|
作者
CHAYODICHY, R [1 ]
OSTROSKYSOLIS, F [1 ]
MENESES, S [1 ]
HARMONY, T [1 ]
MIGUEL, AG [1 ]
机构
[1] NATL AUTONOMOUS UNIV MEXICO,DEPT PSYCHOPHYSIOL,MEXICO CITY 04510,DF,MEXICO
关键词
EVENT RELATED POTENTIALS; EVOKED POTENTIALS; READING; DYSLEXIA;
D O I
10.3109/00207459108986269
中图分类号
Q189 [神经科学];
学科分类号
071006 ;
摘要
Clinical evidence has shown that expectancy or anticipatory reactions influence the ability to read. It is possible that the reading problems shown by dyslexic children could be due to the absence of anticipatory hypotheses when they decode verbal material. Research was therefore carried out into these clinical observations to see if they could be detected on an electrophysiological level using a technique for recording Event Related Potentials (ERPs). In this study, our intention was to observe if there were any differences between a sample population of normal children and one of dyslexic children in the ERPs recorded on the presentation of words both in and out of context. The words recorded during the reading in context were: the word la" (the feminine article the" in Spanish), an intermediate" word and a final" word in a series of sentences. The first two have a greater anticipatory load than the reading of the final word since this is the word that closes the meaning of the sentence. Furthermore, as a control, the ERPs that were produced when reading isolated words were recorded, a situation that does not require the presence of anticipatory processes. The control group was made up of subjects with adequate school performance and no pathological background, and the experimental group was composed of subjects whose performance on a psychoeducational battery, previously administered to 120 Mexican children, had been found to be two standard deviations below the established norms. Following the 10-20 international system, electrodes were placed in zones F3, Cz, P3, 01 and 02 and referred to both earlobes. Statistical analysis revealed significant differences between groups in the amplitude of the ERP recording in the left occipital zone for all conditions when reading in sentences (la," intermediate" and final" It is suggested that this cortical zone participates in decoding verbal material and that it is deficient in subjects with reading problems. © 1991 Informa UK Ltd All rights reserved: reproduction in whole or part not permitted.
引用
收藏
页码:31 / 51
页数:21
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Impaired phonological and orthographic word representations among adult dyslexic readers: Evidence from event-related potentials
    Meyler, A
    Breznitz, Z
    JOURNAL OF GENETIC PSYCHOLOGY, 2005, 166 (02) : 215 - 238
  • [22] Comparison of late components in simultaneously recorded event-related electrical potentials and event-related magnetic fields
    Siedenberg, R
    Goodin, DS
    Aminoff, MJ
    Rowley, HA
    Roberts, TPL
    ELECTROENCEPHALOGRAPHY AND CLINICAL NEUROPHYSIOLOGY, 1996, 99 (02): : 191 - 197
  • [24] Use of event-related potentials to identify language and reading skills
    Molfese, Victoria J.
    Molfese, Dennis L.
    Beswick, Jennifer L.
    Jacobi-Vessels, Jill
    Molfese, Peter J.
    Molnar, Andrew E.
    Wagner, Mary C.
    Haines, Brittany L.
    TOPICS IN LANGUAGE DISORDERS, 2008, 28 (01) : 28 - 45
  • [25] Effects of fear of missing out on inhibitory control in social media context: evidence from event-related potentials
    Xu, Yang
    Tian, Yu
    FRONTIERS IN PSYCHIATRY, 2023, 14
  • [26] EVENT-RELATED POTENTIALS TO AIRWAY OCCLUSION IN YOUNG AND OLD SUBJECTS
    HARVER, A
    SQUIRES, NK
    BLOCHSALISBURY, E
    KATKIN, ES
    PSYCHOPHYSIOLOGY, 1995, 32 (02) : 121 - 129
  • [27] PREDICTING INDIVIDUAL SCHOLASTIC READING PERFORMANCE WITH EVENT-RELATED POTENTIALS: RESULTS OF YEAR TWO OF THE BINGHAMTON READING BRAIN PROJECT
    Khalifian, Negin
    Laszlo, Sarah
    PSYCHOPHYSIOLOGY, 2014, 51 : S66 - S66
  • [28] (Early) context effects on event-related potentials over natural inputs
    Yan, Shaorong
    Jaeger, T. Florian
    LANGUAGE COGNITION AND NEUROSCIENCE, 2020, 35 (05) : 658 - 679
  • [29] Newborn Event-Related Potentials Predict Poorer Pre-Reading Skills in Children at Risk for Dyslexia
    Guttorm, Tomi K.
    Leppanen, Paavo H. T.
    Hamalainen, Jarmo A.
    Eklund, Kenneth M.
    Lyytinen, Heikki J.
    JOURNAL OF LEARNING DISABILITIES, 2010, 43 (05) : 391 - 401
  • [30] EVENT-RELATED POTENTIALS PREDICT GROWTH IN READING ACHIEVEMENT ACROSS A LONGITUDINAL YEAR
    Connors, Katherine
    Laszlo, Sarah
    PSYCHOPHYSIOLOGY, 2017, 54 : S168 - S168