TAROYAN, Naira A. and NICOLSON, Roderick I. (2009). Reading words and pseudowords in dyslexia: ERP and behavioural tests in English-speaking adolescents. International Journal of Psychophysiology, 74 (3), 199-208. [Article]
Abstract
The study reports neurophysiological and behavioural correlates of lexical decision processes in English
speaking dyslexic and non-dyslexic readers. Nine dyslexic adolescents (ages 15.6–17.8) and 9 control (ages
15.4–19.3) adolescents were tested, and the event related potentials (ERPs) to words and pseudowords were
recorded simultaneously with behavioural measures. As expected, both groups showed significantly lower
accuracy and longer response times for the pseudowords. Furthermore, overall performance (in terms of
lower accuracy and longer response times) was significantly worse for the dyslexic group. The ERP analysis
indicated that the later positive peaks, P4 (around 400 ms from stimulus onset) and P5 (around 500 ms),
were significantly delayed and attenuated for the dyslexic group. Analysis of the early ERP peaks recorded in
the occipitotemporal region led to an interesting dissociation. The controls showed a left lateralised
Condition effect, with the amplitude of P1 significantly smaller to words than pseudowords. By contrast,
there was no such lexical effect for the dyslexic group, with equal P1 amplitudes for words and pseudowords,
at the control level for pseudowords. The deviations in the early ERP components of dyslexics support the
evidence of deficits in pre-lexical visual word form recognition within the first 110 ms of activation together
with altered hemispheric asymmetry. In addition, the slowed and attenuated late ERP components and
weaker behavioural performance of the dyslexic group highlight deficits in the later, cognitive, processing
stages.
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