Brain sensitivity to print emerges when children learn letter-speech sound correspondences
Brem, S., Bach, S., Kucian, K., Kujala, J., Guttorm, T., Martin, E., Lyytinen, H., Brandeis, D., & Richardson, U. (2010). Brain sensitivity to print emerges when children learn letter-speech sound correspondences. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 107(17), 7939-7944. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.0904402107
Authors
Date
2010Discipline
MonitieteinenCopyright
© the Authors & National Academy of Sciences, 2010.
The acquisition of reading skills is a major landmark process in a
human’s cognitive development. On the neural level, a new functional
network develops during this time, as children typically learn
to associate the well-known sounds of their spoken language with
unfamiliar characters in alphabetic languages and finally access the
meaning of written words, allowing for later reading. A critical component
of the mature reading network located in the left occipitotemporal
cortex, termed the “visual word-form system” (VWFS),
exhibits print-sensitive activation in readers. When and how the sensitivity
of the VWFS to print comes about remains an open question.
In this study, we demonstrate the initiation of occipito-temporal
cortex sensitivity to print using functional MRI (fMRI) (n = 16) and
event-related potentials (ERP) (n = 32) in a controlled, longitudinal
training study. Print sensitivity of fast (<250 ms) processes in posterior
occipito-temporal brain regions accompanied basic associative
learning of letter–speech sound correspondences in young (mean
age 6.4 ± 0.08 y) nonreading kindergarten children, as shown by
concordant ERP and fMRI results. The occipito-temporal print sensitivity
thus is established during the earliest phase of reading acquisition
in childhood, suggesting that a crucial part of the later reading
network first adopts a role in mapping print and sound.
...
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National Academy of SciencesISSN Search the Publication Forum
0027-8424
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http://www.pnas.org/content/early/2010/04/14/0904402107.full.pdf+htmlPublication in research information system
https://converis.jyu.fi/converis/portal/detail/Publication/19468382
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