| Literature DB >> 20673357 |
Eira Jansson-Verkasalo1, Timo Ruusuvirta, Minna Huotilainen, Paavo Alku, Elena Kushnerenko, Kalervo Suominen, Seppo Rytky, Mirja Luotonen, Tuula Kaukola, Uolevi Tolonen, Mikko Hallman.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Early auditory experiences are a prerequisite for speech and language acquisition. In healthy children, phoneme discrimination abilities improve for native and degrade for unfamiliar, socially irrelevant phoneme contrasts between 6 and 12 months of age as the brain tunes itself to, and specializes in the native spoken language. This process is known as perceptual narrowing, and has been found to predict normal native language acquisition. Prematurely born infants are known to be at an elevated risk for later language problems, but it remains unclear whether these problems relate to early perceptual narrowing. To address this question, we investigated early neurophysiological phoneme discrimination abilities and later language skills in prematurely born infants and in healthy, full-term infants.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2010 PMID: 20673357 PMCID: PMC2920268 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2202-11-88
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Neurosci ISSN: 1471-2202 Impact factor: 3.288
MMN latencies and mean amplitudes in response to native and non-native phoneme contrasts at the ages of 6 and 12 months.
| Condition and age | Latencies ms | Amplitudes μV | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Premature Mean (SD) | Controls Mean (SD) | F | Df | P | Premature Mean (SD) | Controls Mean (SD) | F | Df | P | |
| 6 months | 227 (40) | 194 (29) | 5,602 | 1.22 | .027 | -1.039 (2.12) | -.571 (1.24) | 0,277 | 1.22 | .604 |
| 12 months | 200 (16) | 188 (41) | 0,777 | 1.22 | .387 | -.498 (2.58) | -.819 (2.79) | 0,124 | 1.22 | .728 |
| 6 months | 216 (27) | 197 (33) | 2,216 | 1.22 | .151 | -.575 (2.15) | -.541 (1.24) | 0,002 | 1.22 | .962 |
| 12 months | 198 (16) | 199 (29) | 0,020 | 1.22 | .889 | -1.061 (1.70) | +.323 (1.19) | 5,453 | 1.22 | .029 |
Thevalues represent the corresponding means and standard deviations over six electrodes. The P-values represent the result of the ANOVA analyses, indicating the significance of the between- group differences over all the electrodes.
Figure 1Mismatch negativity (grand average, infrequent-frequent difference waveform) reflects the development of language specific memory traces (left-hemisphere C3 in the figure). Frequent phoneme was/e/, infrequent phoneme was non-native, Estonian/õ/. The MMN amplitude in response to non-native phoneme contrast diminished from the age of 6 months (on the left) to the age of 12 months (on the right) in the full-term controls, while in the prematurely born children this kind of reduction was not observed.
Figure 2Correlation between the MMN mean amplitude over the left hemisphere electrodes (F3, C3, P3) in response to non-native phoneme at the age of 1 year and the number of words produced by the children at the age of 2 years. Correlations are over both groups. Horizontal line is the MMN mean amplitude over the left hemisphere electrodes, vertical line the number of words produced by each child as shown by the MacArthur Communicative Development Inventories (CDI). The result showed that the more negative the mean amplitude indicating better discrimination of non-native phoneme, the less the child produced words at the age of two years.