Neurocognitive processing in dyslexic children: an event related potential (ERP) study

Dyslexic children have been reported to have an attentional neurocognitive deficit in processing sensory stimulations. Due to that, this study was aimed to investigate the neurocognitive attentional processing of dyslexic children comparing to the healthy control children in different auditory and v...

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Main Author: Ali, Siti Atiyah
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2021
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Online Access:http://eprints.usm.my/51770/1/SITI%20ATIYAH%20BINTI%20ALI%20-FINAL%20THESIS%20P-UD002418%28R%29%20PWD-24%20pages.pdf
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spelling my.usm.eprints.51770 http://eprints.usm.my/51770/ Neurocognitive processing in dyslexic children: an event related potential (ERP) study Ali, Siti Atiyah R Medicine Dyslexic children have been reported to have an attentional neurocognitive deficit in processing sensory stimulations. Due to that, this study was aimed to investigate the neurocognitive attentional processing of dyslexic children comparing to the healthy control children in different auditory and visual stimuli paradigms by using the Event-Related Potential (ERP) technique. A total of 24 primary school-aged children were recruited for the dyslexic (n=12) and control (n=12) groups. 128-EEG child sensor net was used for the ERP study. There were four different stimulus paradigms were used in this study which was; auditory oddball, paired audio-visual, visual image congruency, and pseudo words/true words. For the first two paradigms, the MMN and P300 ERP components were analysed for the auditory and shifted attention. Alternatively, the N200 and P300 were analysed for visual attentional processing in the other two paradigms. The values of difference wave between target and standard stimuli were measured in both groups in the 10-20 system at 19 electrodes. Then, the Mann Whitney U test statistical analysis was used to analyse the mean difference amplitudes and latencies for each ERP component between dyslexic and control groups. Besides, source localizations of MMN, N200, and P300 ERP components were done for all paradigms using the Standardized Low-Resolution Brain Electromagnetic Tomography (sLORETA) method in Net-station software. For the result findings, during the auditory oddball paradigm, MMN amplitudes were significantly higher (4 sites) and prolonged latency (1 site) in dyslexics compared with the control. P300 amplitudes were significantly larger at 2 sites, whilst the P300 latencies were significantly shorter and prolonged (in 2 sites each) in the dyslexic children than control children. The source activities of both ERP components in dyslexics were seen lateralized in the right hemisphere with MMN (BA18) and P300 (BA9). In audio-visual paired stimuli, there were significantly shorter P300 latencies (2 sites) among dyslexics which seen both ERP components activated in the left hemisphere during MMN (BA3) and P300 (BA19). In visual image congruency stimuli, significant prolongation of N200 latencies (2 sites) and significantly shorter P300 latency (1 site) among dyslexics than the controls. The source activities were seen in the left occipital lobe of BA 18 (in N200) and BA19 (in P300) areas in dyslexics. For the pseudo word/true words stimuli paradigm, significantly larger amplitudes of N200 (1 site) and P300 (2 sites) with shorter latencies of both components (1 site) were evoked in dyslexics. However, the source activities of N200 and P300 components in dyslexics were located in the BA39 and BA19 areas, accordingly. In conclusion, the ERP findings showed that there were a betterment and enhancement in attentional cognitive function in all auditory and visual task paradigms among dyslexics than the controls, suggested on different neuronal mechanism processing among dyslexics in overcoming the undetermined deficit that was also supported with shifted neural source activities. 2021-09 Thesis NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en http://eprints.usm.my/51770/1/SITI%20ATIYAH%20BINTI%20ALI%20-FINAL%20THESIS%20P-UD002418%28R%29%20PWD-24%20pages.pdf Ali, Siti Atiyah (2021) Neurocognitive processing in dyslexic children: an event related potential (ERP) study. PhD thesis, Universiti Sains Malaysia.
institution Universiti Sains Malaysia
building Hamzah Sendut Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Sains Malaysia
content_source USM Institutional Repository
url_provider http://eprints.usm.my/
language English
topic R Medicine
spellingShingle R Medicine
Ali, Siti Atiyah
Neurocognitive processing in dyslexic children: an event related potential (ERP) study
description Dyslexic children have been reported to have an attentional neurocognitive deficit in processing sensory stimulations. Due to that, this study was aimed to investigate the neurocognitive attentional processing of dyslexic children comparing to the healthy control children in different auditory and visual stimuli paradigms by using the Event-Related Potential (ERP) technique. A total of 24 primary school-aged children were recruited for the dyslexic (n=12) and control (n=12) groups. 128-EEG child sensor net was used for the ERP study. There were four different stimulus paradigms were used in this study which was; auditory oddball, paired audio-visual, visual image congruency, and pseudo words/true words. For the first two paradigms, the MMN and P300 ERP components were analysed for the auditory and shifted attention. Alternatively, the N200 and P300 were analysed for visual attentional processing in the other two paradigms. The values of difference wave between target and standard stimuli were measured in both groups in the 10-20 system at 19 electrodes. Then, the Mann Whitney U test statistical analysis was used to analyse the mean difference amplitudes and latencies for each ERP component between dyslexic and control groups. Besides, source localizations of MMN, N200, and P300 ERP components were done for all paradigms using the Standardized Low-Resolution Brain Electromagnetic Tomography (sLORETA) method in Net-station software. For the result findings, during the auditory oddball paradigm, MMN amplitudes were significantly higher (4 sites) and prolonged latency (1 site) in dyslexics compared with the control. P300 amplitudes were significantly larger at 2 sites, whilst the P300 latencies were significantly shorter and prolonged (in 2 sites each) in the dyslexic children than control children. The source activities of both ERP components in dyslexics were seen lateralized in the right hemisphere with MMN (BA18) and P300 (BA9). In audio-visual paired stimuli, there were significantly shorter P300 latencies (2 sites) among dyslexics which seen both ERP components activated in the left hemisphere during MMN (BA3) and P300 (BA19). In visual image congruency stimuli, significant prolongation of N200 latencies (2 sites) and significantly shorter P300 latency (1 site) among dyslexics than the controls. The source activities were seen in the left occipital lobe of BA 18 (in N200) and BA19 (in P300) areas in dyslexics. For the pseudo word/true words stimuli paradigm, significantly larger amplitudes of N200 (1 site) and P300 (2 sites) with shorter latencies of both components (1 site) were evoked in dyslexics. However, the source activities of N200 and P300 components in dyslexics were located in the BA39 and BA19 areas, accordingly. In conclusion, the ERP findings showed that there were a betterment and enhancement in attentional cognitive function in all auditory and visual task paradigms among dyslexics than the controls, suggested on different neuronal mechanism processing among dyslexics in overcoming the undetermined deficit that was also supported with shifted neural source activities.
format Thesis
author Ali, Siti Atiyah
author_facet Ali, Siti Atiyah
author_sort Ali, Siti Atiyah
title Neurocognitive processing in dyslexic children: an event related potential (ERP) study
title_short Neurocognitive processing in dyslexic children: an event related potential (ERP) study
title_full Neurocognitive processing in dyslexic children: an event related potential (ERP) study
title_fullStr Neurocognitive processing in dyslexic children: an event related potential (ERP) study
title_full_unstemmed Neurocognitive processing in dyslexic children: an event related potential (ERP) study
title_sort neurocognitive processing in dyslexic children: an event related potential (erp) study
publishDate 2021
url http://eprints.usm.my/51770/1/SITI%20ATIYAH%20BINTI%20ALI%20-FINAL%20THESIS%20P-UD002418%28R%29%20PWD-24%20pages.pdf
http://eprints.usm.my/51770/
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score 13.160551