Abstract

Developmental dyslexia is a reading disorder that is associated with deficits in phonological processing, where the exact neural basis for those processing deficits remains unclear. In particular, disagreement exists whether degraded phonological representations or an impaired access to the phonological representations causes these deficits. To investigate this question and to trace changes in neurophysiology during the process of reading acquisition, we designed a longitudinal study with event related potentials (ERPs) in children between kindergarten and second grade. We used an explicit word processing task to elicit the late positive component (LPC), which has been shown to reflect phonological processing. A brain-wide analysis of the LPC with an electrode-wise application of mixed effects models showed significantly attenuated amplitudes in the left temporo-parietal region in dyslexic children. Since these differences were only present in the word and not in the picture (i.e. control) condition, the attenuated amplitudes might reflect impaired access to the phonological representations of words. This was further confirmed by the longitudinal development, which showed a rapid increase in amplitude at the beginning of reading instruction and a decrease with continuing automatization, possibly pointing to a progression from grapheme-phoneme parsing to whole word reading. Our longitudinal study provides the first evidence that it is possible to detect neurophysiological differences in the LPC between children with dyslexia and control children in both preliterate and very early stages of reading acquisition, providing new insights about the neurophysiological development and a potential marker of later reading problems.

Highlights

  • Developmental dyslexia is one of the most common learning disorders, affecting 4–7.5% of all school age children (Fortes et al, 2016; Katusic et al, 2001; Landerl and Moll, 2010; Lewis et al, 1994)

  • The results indicate a deviant access to the phonological representations in dyslexia during the process of reading acquisition displayed as an attenuation of the late positive component (LPC) in the left temporo-parietal region

  • The LPC is important for the process of reading, as it probably reflects the access to the phonological representations of words (Hasko et al, 2013)

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Summary

Introduction

Developmental dyslexia is one of the most common learning disorders, affecting 4–7.5% of all school age children (Fortes et al, 2016; Katusic et al, 2001; Landerl and Moll, 2010; Lewis et al, 1994). It is characterized by serious difficulties in learning to read and write in spite of sufficient cognitive ability and opportunity. Consistent with the second assumption, Verhoeven et al (2016) found that emerging literacy was primarily predicted by the accessibility of phonological representations in the mental lexicon and not by the specificity of those representations

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