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  3. Integration of Spoken and Written Words in Beginning Readers: A Topographic ERP Study
 

Integration of Spoken and Written Words in Beginning Readers: A Topographic ERP Study

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BORIS DOI
10.7892/boris.130204
Date of Publication
November 24, 2014
Publication Type
Article
Division/Institute

Universitätsklinik fü...

Contributor
Jost, Lea B.
Eberhard-Moscicka, Aleksandra Katarzynaorcid-logo
Universitätsklinik für Neurologie
Frisch, Christine
Dellwo, Volker
Maurer, Urs
Subject(s)

600 - Technology::610...

Series
Brain topography
ISSN or ISBN (if monograph)
0896-0267
Publisher
Springer
Language
English
Publisher DOI
10.1007/s10548-013-0336-4
PubMed ID
24271979
Description
Integrating visual and auditory language information is critical for reading. Suppression and congruency effects in audiovisual paradigms with letters and speech sounds have provided information about low-level mechanisms of grapheme-phoneme integration during reading. However, the central question about how such processes relate to reading entire words remains unexplored. Using ERPs, we investigated whether audiovisual integration occurs for words already in beginning readers, and if so, whether this integration is reflected by differences in map strength or topography (aim 1); and moreover, whether such integration is associated with reading fluency (aim 2). A 128-channel EEG was recorded while 69 monolingual (Swiss)-German speaking first-graders performed a detection task with rare targets. Stimuli were presented in blocks either auditorily (A), visually (V) or audiovisually (matching: AVM; nonmatching: AVN). Corresponding ERPs were computed, and unimodal ERPs summated (A + V = sumAV). We applied TANOVAs to identify time windows with significant integration effects: suppression (sumAV–AVM) and congruency (AVN–AVM). They were further characterized using GFP and 3D-centroid analyses, and significant effects were correlated with reading fluency. The results suggest that audiovisual suppression effects occur for familiar German and unfamiliar English words, whereas audiovisual congruency effects can be found only for familiar German words, probably due to lexical-semantic processes involved. Moreover, congruency effects were characterized by topographic differences, indicating that different sources are active during processing of congruent compared to incongruent audiovisual words. Furthermore, no clear associations between audiovisual integration and reading fluency were found. The degree to which such associations develop in beginning readers remains open to further investigation.
Handle
https://boris-portal.unibe.ch/handle/20.500.12422/180142
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Jost2014_Article_IntegrationOfSpokenAndWrittenW.pdftextAdobe PDF2.79 MBpublisherpublishedOpen
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