113 research outputs found
Rapid automatized naming and reading performance: a meta-analysis
Evidence that rapid naming skill is associated with reading ability has become increasingly prevalent in recent years. However, there is considerable variation in the literature concerning the magnitude of this relationship. The objective of the present study was to provide a comprehensive analysis of the evidence on the relationship between rapid automatized naming (RAN) and reading performance. To this end, we conducted a meta-analysis of the correlational relationship between these 2 constructs to (a) determine the overall strength of the RAN-reading association and (b) identify variables that systematically moderate this relationship. A random-effects model analysis of data from 137 studies (857 effect sizes; 28,826 participants) indicated a moderate-to-strong relationship between RAN and reading performance (r = .43, I-2 = 68.40). Further analyses revealed that RAN contributes to the 4 measures of reading (word reading, text reading, non-word reading, and reading comprehension), but higher coefficients emerged in favor of real word reading and text reading. RAN stimulus type and type of reading score were the factors with the greatest moderator effect on the magnitude of the RAN-reading relationship. The consistency of orthography and the subjects' grade level were also found to impact this relationship, although the effect was contingent on reading outcome. It was less evident whether the subjects' reading proficiency played a role in the relationship. Implications for future studies are discussed
Eye-movements in implicit artificial grammar learning
Artificial grammar learning (AGL) has been probed with forced-choice behavioral tests (active tests). Recent attempts to probe the outcomes of learning (implicitly acquired knowledge) with eye-movement responses (passive tests) have shown null results. However, these latter studies have not tested for sensitivity effects, for example, increased eye movements on a printed violation. In this study, we tested for sensitivity effects in AGL tests with (Experiment 1) and without (Experiment 2) concurrent active tests (preference- and grammaticality classification) in an eye-tracking experiment. Eye movements discriminated between sequence types in passive tests and more so in active tests. The eye-movement profile did not differ between preference and grammaticality classification, and it resembled sensitivity effects commonly observed in natural syntax processing. Our findings show that the outcomes of implicit structured sequence learning can be characterized in eye tracking. More specifically, whole trial measures (dwell time, number of fixations) showed robust AGL effects, whereas first-pass measures (first-fixation duration) did not. Furthermore, our findings strengthen the link between artificial and natural syntax processing, and they shed light on the factors that determine performance differences in preference and grammaticality classification tests.Max Planck Institute for PsycholinguisticsDonders Institute for Brain, Cognition and BehaviorVetenskapsradetSwedish Dyslexia Foundatio
Predictability modulates the affective and sensory-discriminative neural processing of pain
Knowing what is going to happen next, that is, the capacity to predict upcoming events, modulates the extent to which aversive stimuli induce stress and anxiety. We explored this issue by manipulating the temporal predictability of aversive events by means of a visual cue, which was either correlated or uncorrelated with pain stimuli (electric shocks). Subjects reported lower levels of anxiety, negative valence and pain intensity when shocks were predictable. In addition to attenuate focus on danger, predictability allows for correct temporal estimation of, and selective attention to, the sensory input. With functional magnetic resonance imaging, we found that predictability was related to enhanced activity in relevant sensory-discriminative processing areas, such as the primary and secondary sensory cortex and posterior insula. In contrast, the unpredictable more aversive context was correlated to brain activity in the anterior insula and the orbitofrontal cortex, areas associated with affective pain processing. This context also prompted increased activity in the posterior parietal cortex and lateral prefrontal cortex that we attribute to enhanced alertness and sustained attention during unpredictability. (c) 2006 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.This study was supported by grants from The Swedish
Research Council (2003-5810), The family Hedlund Foundation
and Karolinska Institutet. The project was finished in the context of
Stockholm Brain Institute.info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio
Disruption of order information by irrelevant items: A serial recognition paradigm
irrelevant speech effect (ISE) is defined as a decrement in visually presented digit-list short-term memory performance due to exposure to irrelevant auditory material. Perhaps the most successful theoretical explanation of the effect is the changing state hypothesis. This hypothesis explains the effect in terms of confusion between amodal serial order cues, and represents a view based on the interference caused by the processing of similar order information of the visual and auditory materials. An alternative view suggests that the interference occurs as a consequence of the similarity between the visual and auditory contents of the stimuli. An important argument for the former view is the observation that ISE is almost exclusively observed in tasks that require memory for serial order. However, most short-term memory tasks require that both item and order information be retained in memory. An ideal task to investigate the sensitivity of maintenance of serial order to irrelevant speech would be one that calls upon order information but not item information. One task that is particularly suited to address this issue is serial recognition. In a typical serial recognition task, a list of items is presented and then probed by the same list in which the order of two adjacent items has been transposed. Due to the re-presentation of the encoding string, serial recognition requires primarily the serial order to be maintained while the content of the presented items is deemphasized. In demonstrating a highly significant ISE of changing versus steady-state auditory items in a serial recognition task, the present finding lends support for and extends previous empirical findings suggesting that irrelevant speech has the potential to interfere with the coding of the order of the items to be memorized. (c) 2006 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved
Interaction between a verbal working memory network and the medial temporal lobe
The irrelevant speech effect illustrates that sounds that are irrelevant to a visually presented short-term memory task still interfere with neuronal function. In the present study we explore the functional and effective connectivity of such interference. The functional connectivity analysis suggested an interaction between the level of irrelevant speech and the correlation between in particular the left superior temporal region, associated with verbal working memory, and the left medial temporal lobe. Based on this psycho-physiological interaction, and to broaden the understanding of this result, we performed a network analysis, using a simple network model for verbal working memory, to analyze its interaction with the medial temporal lobe memory system. The results showed dissociations in terms of network interactions between frontal as well as parietal and temporal areas in relation to the medial temporal lobe. The results of the present study suggest that a transition from phonological loop processing towards an engagement of episodic processing might take place during the processing of interfering irrelevant sounds. We speculate that, in response to the irrelevant sounds, this reflects a dynamic shift in processing as suggested by a closer interaction between a verbal working memory system and the medial temporal lobe memory system. (c) 2006 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio
On the relevance of the neurobiological analogue of the finite-state architecture
We present two simple arguments for the potential relevance of a neurobiological analogue of the finite-state architecture. The first assumes the classical cognitive framework, is well-known, and is based on the assumption that the brain is finite with respect to its memory organization. The second is formulated within a general dynamical systems framework and is based on the assumption that the brain sustains some level of noise and/or does not utilize infinite precision processing. We briefly review the classical cognitive framework based on Church-Turing computability and non-classical approaches based on analog processing in dynamical systems. We conclude that the dynamical neurobiological analogue of the finite-state architecture appears to be relevant, at least at an implementational level, for cognitive brain systems
¿Qué nos cuenta el nombramiento rápido sobre la dislexia?
This article summarizes some of the important fin
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dings from research evaluating the relationship between
poor rapid naming and impaired reading performance.
Substantial evidence shows that dyslexic readers have
problems with rapid naming of visual items. Early re
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search assumed that this was a consequence of phono
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logical processing deficits, but recent findings suggest
that non-phonological processes may lie at the root of
the association between slow naming speed and poor
reading. The hypothesis that rapid naming reflects an
independent core deficit in dyslexia is supported by the
main findings: (1) some dyslexics are characterized by
rapid naming difficulties but intact phonological skills;
(2) evidence for an independent association between
rapid naming and reading competence in the dyslexic
readers, when the effect of phonological skills was con
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trolled; (3) rapid naming and phonological processing
measures are not reliably correlated. Recent research
also reveals greater predictive power of rapid naming, in particular the inter-item pause time, for high-frequency
word reading compared to pseudoword reading in de
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velopmental dyslexia. Altogether, the results are more
consistent with the view that a phonological component
alone cannot account for the rapid naming performance
in dyslexia. Rather, rapid naming problems may emerge
from the inefficiencies in visual-orthographic processing
as well as in phonological processing
Broca's region: A causal role in implicit processing of grammars with crossed non-adjacent dependencies
Non-adjacent dependencies are challenging for the language learning machinery and are acquired later than adjacent dependencies. In this transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) study, we show that participants successfully discriminated between grammatical and non-grammatical sequences after having implicitly acquired an artificial language with crossed non-adjacent dependencies. Subsequent to transcranial magnetic stimulation of Broca's region, discrimination was impaired compared to when a language-irrelevant control region (vertex) was stimulated. These results support the view that Broca's region is engaged in structured sequence processing and extend previous functional neuroimaging results on artificial grammar learning (AGL) in two directions: first, the results establish that Broca's region is a causal component in the processing of non-adjacent dependencies, and second, they show that implicit processing of non-adjacent dependencies engages Broca's region. Since patients with lesions in Broca's region do not always show grammatical processing difficulties, the result that Broca's region is causally linked to processing of non-adjacent dependencies is a step towards clarification of the exact nature of syntactic deficits caused by lesions or perturbation to Broca's region. Our findings are consistent with previous results and support a role for Broca's region in general structured sequence processing, rather than a specific role for the processing of hierarchically organized sentence structure. (C) 2017 Published by Elsevier B.V.Max Planck Institute for PsycholinguisticsDonders Institute for BrainCognition and BehaviourCentre for Cognitive NeuroimagingRadboud University NijmegenFundacao para a Ciencia e Tecnologia [PTDC/PSI-PC0/110734/2009]IBB/CBME, LA [PEst-OE/EQB/LA0023/2013]Vetenskapsradet [8276]Swedish Dyslexia FoundationFEDER/POC
Preditores da leitura ao longo da escolaridade: alterações dinâmicas no papel da consciência fonológica e da nomeação rápida
A aquisição da leitura envolve múltiplas aprendizagens, desde o contacto inicial
com o alfabeto até ao momento em que a criança se torna apta a ler correcta e
fluentemente.
Reportamos aqui os principais resultados de um estudo transversal
com alunos do primeiro ciclo (N = 568) em que avaliámos a relação entre a
exactidão e velocidade da leitura com capacidades de processamento fonológico,
nomeação rápida, conhecimento letra
-
s
om e vocabulário. Verificámos que apesar
de a consciência fonológica ser o preditor mais importante da exactidão e fluência
da leitura, o seu peso decresce à medida que a escolaridade aumenta;
simultaneamente, dá
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se o aumento do contributo de variáveis ass
ociadas ao
automatismo e reconhecimento lexical. Concluímos que ao longo da aprendizagem
se dá uma alteração dinâmica dos processos cognitivos subjacentes à leitura, em
que a criança passa de uma leitura assente em processos sub
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lexicais para uma
leitura r
ecorrendo maciçamente ao reconhecimento ortográfico das palavras
- …