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Rapid changes in brain activity during learning of grapheme-phoneme associations in adults

TLDR
Dynamic changes in brain responses related to multi-sensory processing when grapheme-phoneme associations were learned and changes were observed in the brain responses to the novel letters during the learning process are found.
Abstract
Learning to associate written letters with speech sounds is crucial for the initial phase of acquiring reading skills. However, little is known about the cortical reorganization for supporting letter-speech sound learning, particularly the brain dynamics during the learning of grapheme-phoneme associations. In the present study, we trained 30 Finnish participants (mean age: 24.33 years, SD: 3.50 years) to associate novel foreign letters with familiar Finnish speech sounds on two consecutive days (first day ~ 50 minutes; second day ~ 25 minutes), while neural activity was measured using magnetoencephalography (MEG). Two sets of audiovisual stimuli were used for the training in which the grapheme-phoneme association in one set (Learnable) could be learned based on the different learning cues provided, but not in the other set (Control). The learning progress was tracked at a trial-by-trial basis and used to segment different learning stages for the MEG source analysis. The learning-related changes were examined by comparing the brain responses to Learnable and Control uni/multi-sensory stimuli, as well as the brain responses to learning cues at different learning stages over the two days. We found dynamic changes in brain responses related to multi-sensory processing when grapheme-phoneme associations were learned. Further, changes were observed in the brain responses to the novel letters during the learning process. We also found that some of these learning effects were observed only after memory consolidation the following day. Overall, the learning process modulated the activity in a large network of brain regions, including the superior temporal cortex and the dorsal (parietal) pathway. Most interestingly, middle- and inferior- temporal regions were engaged during multi-sensory memory encoding after the cross-modal relationship was extracted from the learning cues. Our findings highlight the brain dynamics and plasticity related to the learning of letter-speech sound associations and provide a more refined model of grapheme-phoneme learning in reading acquisition.

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Top-down task effects overrule automatic multisensory responses to letter-sound pairs in auditory association cortex

TL;DR: The present event-related fMRI study was designed to address two questions that could not directly be addressed in the previous studies, due to their passive nature and blocked design: whether the enhancement/suppression of auditory cortex are truly multisensory integration effects or can be explained by different attention levels during congruent/incongruent blocks.
Posted ContentDOI

Neurofunctional mechanisms underlying audiovisual integration of characters and pinyin in Chinese children

TL;DR: Both script-universal and script-specific neurofunctional substrates of print-sound integration as well as their processing- and region-dependent associations with reading abilities in typical Chinese children are revealed.
References
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A Reproducible MEG/EEG Group Study With the MNE Software: Recommendations, Quality Assessments, and Good Practices.

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Cortical Plasticity of Audio–Visual Object Representations

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that short-term cross-modal association learning was sufficient to induce plastic changes of both AV integration of object stimuli and mechanisms of AV congruency processing.
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A Rapid Form of Offline Consolidation in Skill Learning.

TL;DR: A rapid form of offline consolidation that substantially contributes to early skill learning and may extend the concept of consolidation to a time scale in the order of seconds, rather than the hours or days traditionally accepted.
Journal ArticleDOI

Syntax gradually segregates from semantics in the developing brain

TL;DR: It is not until the end of the 10th year of life that children show a neural selectivity for syntax, segregated and gradually independent from semantics, in the left inferior frontal cortex as in the adult brain.
Journal ArticleDOI

Reduced neural integration of letters and speech sounds in dyslexic children scales with individual differences in reading fluency

TL;DR: These results confirm and extend previous findings in dyslexic children by demonstrating a deficient pattern of letter-speech sound integration depending on the level of reading dysfluency, and underscore the importance of considering individual differences across the entire spectrum of reading skills in addition to group differences between typical and dyslexics.
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