| Literature DB >> 29628882 |
Jessica W Younger1, James R Booth1,2.
Abstract
Neuroimaging work from developmental and reading intervention research has suggested a cause of reading failure may be lack of engagement of parietotemporal cortex during initial acquisition of grapheme-phoneme (letter-sound) mappings. Parietotemporal activation increases following grapheme-phoneme learning and successful reading intervention. Further, stimulation of parietotemporal cortex improves reading skill in lower ability adults. However, it is unclear whether these improvements following stimulation are due to enhanced grapheme-phoneme mapping abilities. To test this hypothesis, we used transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) to manipulate parietotemporal function in adult readers as they learned a novel artificial orthography with new grapheme-phoneme mappings. Participants received real or sham stimulation to the left inferior parietal lobe (L IPL) for 20 min before training. They received explicit training over the course of 3 days on 10 novel words each day. Learning of the artificial orthography was assessed at a pre-training baseline session, the end of each of the three training sessions, an immediate post-training session and a delayed post-training session about 4 weeks after training. Stimulation interacted with baseline reading skill to affect learning of trained words and transfer to untrained words. Lower skill readers showed better acquisition, whereas higher skill readers showed worse acquisition, when training was paired with real stimulation, as compared to readers who received sham stimulation. However, readers of all skill levels showed better maintenance of trained material following parietotemporal stimulation, indicating a differential effect of stimulation on initial learning and consolidation. Overall, these results indicate that parietotemporal stimulation can enhance learning of new grapheme-phoneme relationships in readers with lower reading skill. Yet, while parietotemporal function is critical to new learning, its role in continued reading improvement likely changes as readers progress in skill.Entities:
Keywords: artificial orthography; parietotemporal cortex; reading acquisition; reading skill; transcranial direct current stimulation
Year: 2018 PMID: 29628882 PMCID: PMC5876236 DOI: 10.3389/fnhum.2018.00109
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Hum Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5161 Impact factor: 3.169
IQ was measured by the Performance subscale of WASI.
| Age | IQ | Word identification | Word attack | Sight word efficiency | Pseudoword decoding efficiency | Reading rate | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 23 (5) | 114 (9) | 106 (7) | 101 (9) | 105 (9) | 97 (9) | 2.25 (0.29) | |
| Range 1.70–3.00 | |||||||
| 24 (4) | 115 (9) | 107 (6) | 101 (9) | 103 (11) | 97 (9) | 2.17 (0.33) | |
| Range 1.22–2.68 |
Groups were similar in demographics and performed similarly on all measures of reading skill. IQ was measured by the Performance sub-scale IQ index from the Wechsler’s Abbreviated Scale of Intelligence. Note: all tests have μ = 100, σ = 15, except for Reading Rate.
Figure 1Depiction of the training procedures.
Figure 2Illustration of training trial.
Parameter estimates (standard error) for each covariate on the intercept, training slope and retention slope for trained and transfer words.
| Trained words | Transfer words | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Estimate | (SE) | Estimate | (SE) | ||
| Stimulation group | 0.193 | (0.631) | −0.133 | (0.613) | |
| Skill | 2.756* | (0.802) | 2.481* | (0.874) | |
| Group by skill | −2.635* | (0.835) | −2.391* | (0.888) | |
| Group by age | 0.098 | (0.436) | 0.294 | (0.415) | |
| Group by IQ | −0.489 | (0.420) | −0.541 | (0.394) | |
| Group by sex | −0.060 | (0.275) | 0.030 | (0.267) | |
| Stimulation group | −0.181 | (0.239) | 0.005 | (0.244) | |
| Skill | −1.148* | (0.462) | −1.358* | (0.450) | |
| Group by skill | 1.269* | (0.452) | 1.347* | (0.448) | |
| Group by age | −0.424* | (0.160) | −0.268 | (0.166) | |
| Group by IQ | 0.491* | (0.156) | 0.372* | (0.163) | |
| Group by sex | 0.130 | (0.103) | 0.030 | (0.267) | |
| Stimulation group | −0.838* | (0.285) | −0.74 | (0.439) | |
| Skill | −0.820 | (0.623) | 1.984* | (0.838) | |
| Group by skill | 0.672 | (0.641) | −1.282 | (0.957) | |
| Group by age | 0.949* | (0.173) | 0.274 | (0.386) | |
| Group by IQ | −0.235 | (0.261) | −0.068 | (0.387) | |
| Group by sex | 0.001 | (0.144) | 0.300 | (0.212) | |
Positive effect of group indicates an advantage for sham, and a negative effect of group indicates an advantage for stimulation. Skill had a significant effect and interaction with group on training slopes for both trained and transfer words. Stimulation affected the retention slope for trained words while skill affected the retention slope of transfer words. *.
Figure 3Model estimated training (A) and retention (B) slopes for trained words. During training (A), low skill readers (blue) benefitted from real stimulation (solid), showing steeper learning curves compared to those who received sham stimulation (dashed). High skill readers (red), showed less training related gains following stimulation (solid) compared to those who received sham stimulation (dashed). During retention (B), those who received real stimulation (solid) showed less forgetting compared to those who received sham stimulation (dashed). Plots reflect the model estimated performance for an 18-year-old male with average intelligence (reflecting mean centered scores of 0) at two standard deviations below (low) and above (high) group mean reading skill.
Figure 4Model estimated training (A) and retention (B) slopes for transfer words. During training (A), low skill readers (blue) who received real stimulation (solid) showed steeper learning curves for transfer to novel words compared to those who received sham stimulation (dashed). High skill readers (red) were less able to transfer letter knowledge to newly learned words following stimulation (solid) compared to those who received sham stimulation (dashed). During retention (B), high skill readers regardless of stimulation group (red) showed less decline in transfer compared to low skill readers (blue) who show a decrease in transfer. Plots reflect the model estimated performance for an 18-year-old male with average intelligence (reflecting mean centered scores of 0) at two standard deviations below (low) and above (high) group mean reading skill.
Parameter estimates (standard error) for the effect of group for lower, average and higher skill readers.
| Trained words | Transfer words | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Estimate | (SE) | Estimate | (SE) | |
| −1.869* | (0.857) | −1.668 | (0.938) | |
| −0.092 | (0.535) | 0.381 | (0.588) | |
| 1.685* | (0.869) | 2.431* | (0.953) | |
Positive effect of group indicates an advantage for sham, and a negative effect of group indicates an advantage for stimulation. Stimulation improved the training curve for low skill readers, but interfered with learning for high skill readers. *.