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1.
Cereb Cortex ; 24(9): 2464-75, 2014 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23588185

ABSTRACT

Literacy is a uniquely human cross-modal cognitive process wherein visual orthographic representations become associated with auditory phonological representations through experience. Developmental studies provide insight into how experience-dependent changes in brain organization influence phonological processing as a function of literacy. Previous investigations show a synchrony-dependent influence of letter presentation on individual phoneme processing in superior temporal sulcus; others demonstrate recruitment of primary and associative auditory cortex during cross-modal processing. We sought to determine whether brain regions supporting phonological processing of larger lexical units (monosyllabic words) over larger time windows is sensitive to cross-modal information, and whether such effects are literacy dependent. Twenty-two children (age 8-14 years) made rhyming judgments for sequentially presented word and pseudoword pairs presented either unimodally (auditory- or visual-only) or cross-modally (audiovisual). Regression analyses examined the relationship between literacy and congruency effects (overlapping orthography and phonology vs. overlapping phonology-only). We extend previous findings by showing that higher literacy is correlated with greater congruency effects in auditory cortex (i.e., planum temporale) only for cross-modal processing. These skill effects were specific to known words and occurred over a large time window, suggesting that multimodal integration in posterior auditory cortex is critical for fluent reading.


Subject(s)
Auditory Cortex/physiology , Pattern Recognition, Visual/physiology , Reading , Speech Perception/physiology , Adolescent , Auditory Cortex/growth & development , Child , Female , Humans , Judgment/physiology , Language Development , Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Male , Neuropsychological Tests , Phonetics , Speech Acoustics
2.
Neuropsychologia ; 50(9): 2224-32, 2012 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22698991

ABSTRACT

Dyslexia in alphabetic languages has been extensively investigated and suggests a central deficit in orthography to phonology mapping in the left hemisphere. Compared to dyslexia in alphabetic languages, the central deficit for Chinese dyslexia is still unclear. Because of the logographic nature of Chinese characters, some have suggested that Chinese dyslexia should have larger deficits in the semantic system. To investigate this, Chinese children with reading disability (RD) were compared to typically developing (TD) children using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) on a rhyming judgment task and on a semantic association judgment task. RD children showed less activation for both tasks in right visual (BA18, 19) and left occipito-temporal cortex (BA 37), suggesting a deficit in visuo-orthographic processing. RD children also showed less activation for both tasks in left inferior frontal gyrus (BA44), which additionally showed significant correlations with activation of bilateral visuo-orthographic regions in the RD group, suggesting that the abnormalities in frontal cortex and in posterior visuo-orthographic regions may reflect a deficit in the connection between brain regions. Analyses failed to reveal larger differences between groups for the semantic compared to the rhyming task, suggesting that Chinese dyslexia is similarly impaired in the access to phonology and to semantics from the visual orthography.


Subject(s)
Brain/physiopathology , Dyslexia/psychology , Semantics , Speech Perception/physiology , Adolescent , Asian People , Child , Data Interpretation, Statistical , Female , Humans , Image Processing, Computer-Assisted , Intelligence Tests , Judgment , Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Male , Occipital Lobe/physiopathology , Reaction Time/physiology , Reading , Temporal Lobe/physiopathology , Visual Perception/physiology
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