| Literature DB >> 31607875 |
Irina Ovchinnikova1,2, Marina A Zhukova1,2, Anna Luchina1, Maxim V Petrov1, Marina J Vasilyeva3, Elena L Grigorenko1,2,4,5.
Abstract
The attunement of speech perception/discrimination to the properties of one's native language is a crucial step in speech and language development at early ages. Studying these processes in young children with a history of institutionalization is of great interest, as being raised in institutional care (IC) may lead to lags in language development. The sample consisted of 82 children, split into two age groups. The younger age group (<12 months) included 17 children from the IC and 17 children from the biological-family-care (BFC) group. The older group (>12 months) consisted of 23 children from the IC group, and 25 children from the BFC group. A double-oddball paradigm with three consonant-vowel syllables was used, utilizing native (Russian) and foreign (Hindi) languages. A Mismatch Negativity (MMN) component was elicited within a 125-225 ms time window in the frontal-central electrode. Findings demonstrate the absence of MMN effect in the younger age group, regardless of the living environment. Children in the older group are sensitive to native deviants and do not differentiate foreign language contrasts. No significant differences were observed between the IC and BFC groups for children older than 12 months, indicating that children in the IC have typical phonological processing. The results show that the MMN effect is not registered in Russian speaking children before the age of 12 months, regardless of their living environment. At 20 months of age, institutionally reared children show no evidence of delays in phonetic development despite a limited experience of language.Entities:
Keywords: MMN; auditory discrimination; event-related potentials; institutionalization; language development; mismatch negativity; psychosocial deprivation
Year: 2019 PMID: 31607875 PMCID: PMC6774417 DOI: 10.3389/fnhum.2019.00300
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Hum Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5161 Impact factor: 3.169
Types of auditory stimuli in the event-related potential (ERP) experiment.
| Stimulus type | Syllable | Language, where the pattern is present | # of trials | Properties | Duration |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Standard | /du:/ | Russian and Hindi | 1,200 | Voiced dental | 246 ms |
| Foreign deviant | Hindi | 150 | Retroflex | 242 ms | |
| Native deviant | /gu:/ | Russian and Hindi | 150 | Voiced velar | 246 ms |
Figure 1Mean amplitude characteristics of event-related potential (ERP) waveforms in the younger (bottom panel) and older (top panel) groups of participants—biological family (BFC, left panel) and children raised in institutional settings (IC, right panel) in response to three types of stimuli: Foreign Deviant, Native Deviant, and Standard. Shaded areas represent confidence intervals.
Figure 2Topographic maps of ERP in the time window of 100 ms–200 ms in the younger and older groups of participants—biological family (BFC) and children raised in institutional settings (IC) in response to three types of stimuli: Foreign Deviant, Native Deviant, and Standard.