Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
6264198 Brain Research 2012 12 Pages PDF
Abstract

The present event-related potential (ERP) study aimed to examine group differences in processing of orthographic information in Chinese children with dyslexia and typically developing children. Twelve dyslexic (ages 100-125 months) and 11 control (ages 104-124 months) children were given a character decision task (similar to a lexical decision task). For the control group, the radical position information influenced the character processing at a later stage of semantic information processing as reflected by a more negative N400 component in the pseudocharacter condition, in which the semantic and phonetic radical were combined following correct orthographic rules, as compared to the noncharacter condition, in which the structure of the semantic and phonetic radicals was reversed from that for each real character. In contrast, the dyslexic group showed no such differences across the experimental conditions for the N400 component. Results suggest that Chinese children with dyslexia may have a deficit in processing orthographic information (specifically, radical position). Furthermore, a late positive component (LPC) was elicited in both groups, suggesting that children may have to back track on their earlier semantic memory in order to make a final decision as to whether the character is real or not.

► It is first ERP study for a role of radical position (RP) in recognition of character. ► RP information is core index to access and comprehension of Chinese character. ► RP was a likely to affect the semantic process at a late stage (N400 time window). ► Chinese dyslexia appeared to manifest a deficit in processing RP. ► It underscores the importance of orthography as a core index of Chinese dyslexia.

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Life Sciences Neuroscience Neuroscience (General)
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