Neurophysiological correlates of word processing deficits in isolated reading and isolated spelling disorders
- PMID: 29353181
- DOI: 10.1016/j.clinph.2017.12.010
Neurophysiological correlates of word processing deficits in isolated reading and isolated spelling disorders
Abstract
Objective: In consistent orthographies, isolated reading disorders (iRD) and isolated spelling disorders (iSD) are nearly as common as combined reading-spelling disorders (cRSD). However, the exact nature of the underlying word processing deficits in isolated versus combined literacy deficits are not well understood yet.
Methods: We applied a phonological lexical decision task (including words, pseudohomophones, legal and illegal pseudowords) during ERP recording to investigate the neurophysiological correlates of lexical and sublexical word-processing in children with iRD, iSD and cRSD compared to typically developing (TD) 9-year-olds.
Results: TD children showed enhanced early sensitivity (N170) for word material and for the violation of orthographic rules compared to the other groups. Lexical orthographic effects (higher LPC amplitude for words than for pseudohomophones) were the same in the TD and iRD groups, although processing took longer in children with iRD. In the iSD and cRSD groups, lexical orthographic effects were evident and stable over time only for correctly spelled words.
Conclusions: Orthographic representations were intact in iRD children, but word processing took longer compared to TD. Children with spelling disorders had partly missing orthographic representations.
Significance: Our study is the first to specify the underlying neurophysiology of word processing deficits associated with isolated literacy deficits.
Keywords: Dyslexia; ERP; Phonological lexical decision task; Reading disorder; Spelling disorder; Word processing.
Copyright © 2017 International Federation of Clinical Neurophysiology. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
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