| Literature DB >> 30333739 |
Joanna Plewko1, Katarzyna Chyl1, Łukasz Bola2,3, Magdalena Łuniewska1,4, Agnieszka Dębska1, Anna Banaszkiewicz3, Marek Wypych3, Artur Marchewka3, Nienke van Atteveldt5, Katarzyna Jednoróg1.
Abstract
In alphabetic scripts, learning letter-sound (LS) association (i.e., letter knowledge) is a strong predictor of later reading skills. LS integration is related to left superior temporal cortex (STC) activity and its disruption was previously observed in dyslexia (DYS). Whether disruption in LS association is a cause of reading impairment or a consequence of decreased exposure to print remains unclear. Using fMRI, we compared activation for letters, speech sounds and LS association in emerging readers with (FHD+, N = 50) and without (FHD-, N = 35) familial history of DYS, out of whom 17 developed DYS 2 years later. Despite having similar reading skills, FHD+ and FHD- groups showed opposite pattern of activation in left STC: In FHD- children activation was higher for incongruent compared to congruent, whereas in FHD+ it was higher for congruent LS pairs. Higher activation to congruent LS pairs was also characteristic of future DYS. The magnitude of incongruency effect in left STC was positively related to early reading skills, but only in FHD- children and (retrospectively) in typical readers. We show that alterations in brain activity during LS association can be detected at very early stages of reading acquisition, suggesting their causal involvement in later reading impairments. Increased response of left STC to incongruent LS pairs in FHD- group might reflect an early stage of automatizing LS associations, where the brain responds actively to conflicting pairs. The absence of such response in FHD+ children could lead to failures in suppressing incongruent information during reading acquisition, which could result in future reading problems.Entities:
Keywords: audiovisual integration; dyslexia; familial risk; letter-speech sound association; reading fluency
Year: 2018 PMID: 30333739 PMCID: PMC6176073 DOI: 10.3389/fnhum.2018.00393
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Hum Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5161 Impact factor: 3.169
Demographic characteristics of FHD− and FHD+ participants, as well as dyslexic (DYS) and typical reading (TR) children together with group differences.
| FHD+ | FHD− | Test statistics | DYS | TR | Test statistics | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| FHD+ vs. FHD− | DYS vs. TR | |||||
| Gender | 20 B, 30 G | 14 B, 21 G | 8 B, 9 G | 26 B, 42 G | ||
| Grade | 12 K, 38 FG | 9 K, 26 FG | 6 K, 11 FG | 14 K, 54 FG | ||
| Age (years) | 6.92 (0.58) | 6.89 (0.57) | 6.74 (0.56) | 6.96 (0.57) | ||
| SES | 46.86 (12.20) | 50.17 (8.00) | 42.63 (11.35) | 49.74 (9.89) | ||
| ARHQ mother | 37.66 (13.50) | 22.14 (7.76) | 34.24 (16.85) | 30.94 (12.58) | ||
| ARHQ father | 41.63 (14.30) | 25.46 (7.21) | 37.67 (11.77) | 33.94 (14.63) | ||
| IQ (sten) | 7.46 (1.42) | 7.60 (1.24) | 7.06 (1.59) | 7.60 (1.25) |
Mean (SD) are depicted. B: boys; G: girls; K: kindergarten; FG: first grade of elementary school; .
The results from behavioral tests in FHD+ and FHD− groups, as well as DYS and TR groups.
| FHD+ | FHD− | Test statistics | DYS | Test statistics | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| FHD+ vs. FHD− | DYS vs. TR | |||||
| Letter knowledge (upper and lower case, max. 64) | 46.92 ± 18.41 (0–64) | 47.40 ± 18.07 (0–64) | 31.76 ± 20.00 (0–59) | 51.26 ± 15.28 (4–64) | ||
| Word read per minute | 15.18 ± 15.96 (0–52) | 18.43 ± 21.01 (0–69) | 4.65 ± 5.13 (0–16) | 19.69 ± 18.84 (0–69) | ||
| Pseudowords read per minute | 13.97 ± 13.40 (0–47) | 12.96 ± 13.61 (0–40) | 4.00 ± 5.03 (0–15) | 15.90 ± 13.74 (0–47) | ||
| Phoneme analysis (solved items, max. 12) | 6.60 ± 4.44 (0–12) | 7.77 ± 4.05 (0–12) | 3.59 ± 3.48 (0–10) | 8.04 ± 4.02 (0–12) | ||
| Phoneme elision (solved items per minute) | 4.10 ± 4.23 (0–13) | 4.26 ± 4.52 (0–15) | 1.47 ± 2.28 (0–7) | 4.88 ± 4.42 (0–15) | ||
| RAN object and color subtests (seconds) | 127.04 ± 29.49 (77–203) | 135.43 ± 35.41 (91–268) | 152.12 ± 40.69 (113–268) | 125.16 ± 26.66 (77–196) | ||
| Orthographic awareness (solved items, max. 30) | 18.45 ± 4.74 (8–29) | 20.06 ± 4.42 (13–29) | 15.38 ± 3.92 (8–25) | 20.03 ± 4.31 (11–29) | ||
| Vocabulary (max. 88) | 79.48 ± 5.40 (64–87) | 77.20 ± 7.29 (57–88) | 76.59 ± 6.14 (64–85) | 79.25 ± 6.04 (57–88) | ||
| Sight word reading* (sten) | 5.82 ± 2.04 (1–10) | 6.09 ± 1.98 (2–10) | 3.65 ± 1.50 (1–6) | 6.51 ± 1.69 (4–10) | ||
| Pseudo-word reading* (sten) | 4.94 ± 1.89 (1–10) | 5.24 ± 1.69 (1–8) | 2.88 ± 1.41 (1–6) | 5.61 ± 1.45 (3–10) | ||
| Text reading* (sten) | 4.63 ± 2.08 (1–9) | 5.27 ± 2.60 (1–10) | 2.12 ± 0.86 (1–3) | 5.62 ± 1.99 (2–10) | ||
| Lexical decision task* (sten) | 5.16 ± 2.21 (1–10) | 5.91 ± 2.17 (2–10) | 2.41 ± 0.87 (1–4) | 6.24 ± 1.72 (3–10) |
Means ± SD together with range in parentheses are presented. *Battery of tests used for dyslexia diagnosis; .
Figure 1Brain areas involved in processing letters (yellow), speech sounds (red) or both unisensory conditions (orange) in children without (FHD−) and with (FHD+) family history of dyslexia (DYS; q(FDR) < 0.01).
Group differences in response to speech sounds and interaction between group and multisensory conditions.
| Brain region | BA | Hemisphere | t/F | Voxels | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Inferior Frontal Gyrus | 10 | R | 54 | 39 | −2 | −4.01 | 910 |
| Middle Frontal Gyrus | 46 | R | 39 | 32 | 22 | −3.20 | 715 |
| Inferior Temporal Gyrus | 37 | R | 54 | −49 | −23 | 17.62 | 648 |
| Planum Temporale, Superior temporal gyrus | 41/13 | L | −42 | −16 | 19 | 13.77 | 1700 |
Note: The results are reported at voxel-wise threshold of .
Figure 2Unisensory group effects for speech sounds with increased activation in FHD+ compared to FHD− children in the right inferior frontal gyrus (A) and in the right middle frontal gyrus (B). The clusters are displayed on average brain from all participants at voxel-wise threshold of p < 0.01, corrected for multiple comparisons using cluster extent threshold of p < 0.05.
Figure 3Interaction effect between group and multisensory conditions (congruent, incongruent) in the left planum temporale/superior temporal gyrus (PT/STG) (A) and in the right inferior temporal gyrus (B). The clusters are displayed on average brain from all participants at voxel-wise threshold of p < 0.01, corrected for multiple comparisons using cluster extent threshold of p < 0.05. Bar graphs illustrate the percent signal change with SEM for multisensory conditions in FHD− and FHD+ (horizontal lines illustrate significant post hoc tests) as well as in DYS and typical reading (TR) children (horizontal line illustrates significant bootstrap statistics).
Figure 4Results obtained using bootstrap analysis based on percent signal change data in two ROIs from Blau et al. (2010) and in the left PT/STG cluster from the whole brain analysis of FHD+ and FHD− children. Red line represents the actual observed value of difference in means between TR and DYS children, whereas shaded gray areas depict significant differences (two-tailed p < 0.05). DYS compared to TR showed higher brain response to congruent letter-sound (LS) pairs in left PT/HS and in left PT/STG as well as higher brain response to speech sounds in right anterior STG (aSTG).
Figure 5Correlations for FHD− and FHD+ children between the neural response to congruent vs. incongruent letter speech sound pairs (fMRI congruency effect) in left superior temporal sulcus (STS) and orthographic awareness, word reading, phoneme analysis and elision along with 95% confidence intervals. Correlations are significant only in FHD− children.