| Literature DB >> 21160549 |
Richard E Frye1, Meng-Hung Wu, Jacqueline Liederman, Janet McGraw Fisher.
Abstract
Functional neuroimaging studies suggest that neural networks that subserve reading are organized differently in dyslexic readers (DRs) and typical readers (TRs), yet the hierarchical structure of these networks has not been well studied. We used Granger causality to examine the effective connectivity of the preparatory network that occurs prior to viewing a non-word stimulus that requires phonological decoding in 7 DRs and 10 TRs who were young adults. The neuromagnetic activity that occurred 500 ms prior to each rhyme trial was analyzed from sensors overlying the left and right inferior frontal areas (IFA), temporoparietal areas, and ventral occipital-temporal areas within the low, medium, and high beta and gamma sub-bands. A mixed-model analysis determined whether connectivity to or from the left and right IFAs differed across connectivity direction (into vs. out of the IFAs), brain areas, reading group, and/or performance. Results indicated that greater connectivity in the low beta sub-band from the left IFA to other cortical areas was significantly related to better non-word rhyme discrimination in DRs but not TRs. This suggests that the left IFA is an important cortical area involved in compensating for poor phonological function in DRs. We suggest that the left IFA activates a wider-than usual network prior to each trial in the service of supporting otherwise effortful phonological decoding in DRs. The fact that the left IFA provides top-down activation to both posterior left hemispheres areas used by TRs for phonological decoding and homologous right hemisphere areas is discussed. In contrast, within the high gamma sub-band, better performance was associated with decreased connectivity between the left IFA and other brain areas, in both reading groups. Overly strong gamma connectivity during the pre-stimulus period may interfere with subsequent transient activation and deactivation of sub-networks once the non-word appears.Entities:
Keywords: Granger causality; compensatory mechanisms; dyslexia; effective connectivity; magnetoencephalography; reading; top-down
Year: 2010 PMID: 21160549 PMCID: PMC3001755 DOI: 10.3389/fnsys.2010.00156
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Syst Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5137
Participant characteristics [mean (standard deviation)].
| Characteristic | Typical readers | Dyslexic readers |
|---|---|---|
| Age | 21.9 (3.1) | 25.0 (6.3) |
| Male:female | 5:5 | 3:4 |
| Handedness | 77.8 (17.2) | 87.1 (11.1) |
| Nelson–Denny rate | 35% (21%) | 6% (6%) |
| Nelson–Denny comprehension | 65% (32%) | 12% (13%) |
| Nelson–Denny average | 50% (21%) | 11% (8%) |
| Vocabulary subtest | 12.6 (2.6) | 13.6 (3.4) |
| Block design subtest | 12.7 (1.6) | 11.4 (2.0) |
Figure 1Granger causality connectivity for the . (A,B) The relationship between performance on the non-word phonological decoding task and Granger causality connectivity for the left inferior frontal area (IFA). (A) The relationship between performance and the difference between inward and outward connectivity. The relationship was only significant for DRs, for which greater outward connectivity (as compared to inward connectivity) from the IFA to other areas was associated with better non-word rhyme discrimination performance (d-prime). (B) The relationship between performance and inward and outward connectivity individually for DRs. Greater outward connectivity from the IFA to other areas was associated with better performance in DRs. (C) Connectivity between the right IFA and the other cortical areas investigated. TPA, temporoparietal area; VOTA, ventral occipital–temporal areas.
Figure 2Connectivity for . (A) Connectivity between the left inferior frontal area (IFA) and other cortical areas in the low gamma sub-band. (B) Connectivity between the right IFA and other cortical area in the medium gamma sub-band. (C) Relationship between performance and connectivity between the left IFA and temporoparietal (TPA) and non-temporoparietal (non-TPA) areas for the high gamma sub-band. (D) Connectivity between the right IFA and other cortical areas for the high gamma sub-band. VOTA, ventral occipital–temporal areas.