Neuroimaging in the study of oral and written language disorders

Neuroimaging in the study of oral and written language disorders

54 Abstracts /International Journal of Pgrhophysiolow a whole, were capable of redundantly separating each emotion from another, thus demonstrating...

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54

Abstracts /International

Journal of Pgrhophysiolow

a whole, were capable of redundantly separating each emotion from another, thus demonstrating Autonomic response pattern specificity. BEHAVIORAL INFLUENCES ON DAILY INTRAARTERIAL BLOOD PRESSURE AND HEART RATE IN NORMOTENSION, BORDERLINE HYPERTENSION, AND HYPERTENSION M. Tuomisto,*‘,* V. Turjamnaa *, J. 011ikainen3, S. Majahalme’ and A. Uusitalo* ‘Department of General Hospital Psychiatry, Tampere University Hospital, Tampere, Finland *Department of Clinical Physiology, Medical School, University of Tampere, Tampere, Finland 3Department of Mathematics and Statistics, University of Tampere, Tampere, Finland Effects of behavior on intra-arterial blood pressure in agematched groups with different blood pressure status are not well-known. We studied daily blood pressure and heart rate in healthy normotensive (NT; n = 331, borderline hypertensive (BHT, n = 30) and hypertensive (HT, n = 32) middle-aged men using a continuous and structured self-monitoring diary. Forty four activities were monitored. About 10 million data points were reduced to 30-second means. Twenty four most common activities explained the greatest amount of variance in mean arterial pressure in general and the least amount of variance in heart rate (HR), systolic and diastolic blood pressure (SBP, DBP), respectively, falling in between. This was also true when sleep was used as a covariate. Reading as a covariate increased the variance explained by different activities, which explained between 50 and 75 per cent of variance in cardiovascular variables in general. Differences in the effects of activities between NT and the two hypertensive groups were clear-cut, but BHT and HT were not always different. In HR and SBP variability, I-IT was different from the other groups. These results are useful especially in the interpretation of data from clinical ambulatory BP monitoring. MISMATCH NEGATIVITY IN THE VISUAL DOMAIN M.J. Sherron & S.S. Rubin University of Georgia Considerable debate has arisen concerning the presence of visual mismatch negativity (MMN). While some investigators have been unable to observe MMN in these conditions. Still, some researchers have been unable to distinguish MMN from N2 waveforms due to attention tasks. The purpose of this study was to establish a method of presenting stimuli that is independent of attention in order to elicit a clear visual MMN. This poster session will describe the method of presenting attention independent stimuli and the resulting waveforms.

25 (1997) 17-84

THE EFFECTS OF PHYSIOLOGIC AGING ELICITED IN A LEXICAL DECISION TASK

ON P300

S.S. Rubin*, K.J. Staub & M. Hot-vat University of Georgia To more fully investigate the decreases in lexical retrieval associated with normal aging, this study used two groups who were matched for chronological age but who were assigned to groups based on a physiologic age profile. Subjects performed a lexical retrieval task while P300 ERPs were collected during target word identification. This paper will describe the method of physiologic age grouping and the significant resulting P300 waveform differences. ATTENTION DEFICIT HYPERACTIVITY DISORDER (ADHD) AND BRAIN IMAGING FINDINGS IN SUBTYPES OF ADHD L.J. Hall* University of Georgia Very little research has clearly articulated the nature of the presumed neurological and neuropsychological bases of ADHD, let alone in subtypes of ADHD. This presentation will review critically the few neuroimaging (MRI) studies of the brains of children with ADHD and will present a rationale for examining brain morphology and function (WRI) in subtypes of ADHD. Results from our initial series will be presented and future research efforts articulated. NEUROIMAGING OF STRUCTURAL AND COGNITIVE PROCESSES IN DEVELOPMENTAL DYSLEXIA G.W. Hynd* University of Georgia Since the early 1980’s some 12 studies have been completed in which the morphological structure of the brains of dyslexics has been examined. More recent studies have also incorporated SPECT and PET methodologies to examine basic cognitive processes. This presentation will critically review these studies from both a theoretical and technical perspective and will suggest ways in which future research employing fMR1 may contribute significantly to our understanding of the severe reading disability. MRI research from the University of Georgia protocol will be presented. NEUROIMAGING IN THE STUDY WRITTEN LANGUAGE DISORDERS M. Newhoff University of Georgia

OF ORAL

AND

Abstracts /International Joumal of Psychophysiology 25 (1997) 17-84

Controversy lingers as to whether Specific Language Impairment (SLI) and dyslexia represent a unitary phenomenon. Although attempts are made to separate these two diagnoses for research and treatment purposes, theories regarding their singularity have been largely supported. Early studies of dyslexic populations via structural MRIs implicated the Sylvian fissure bilaterally. Recent structural MRI studies with SLI children suggest the populations are generally indistinguishable at the structural level. This presentation will focus on the use of neuroimaging techniques, that are functionally (e.g., fMRI) and behaviorally based, as a more viable path for determining potential differences in the neural bases of these disorders. BRAIN ERPs TO CHANGES OF SPEECH SEGMENT DURATIONS IN SIX-MONTH-OLDS P.H.T. Lepplnen* , U. Richardson and H. Lyytinen Department of Psychology, University of Jyvlskyll, P.O. Box 35, FIN-40351 Jyvlskyll, Finland Event-related potentials (ERPs) to variation in duration of speech segments were studied in a sub-sample of 41 six months old infants. Eighteen infants had a familial background of dyslexia and 23 belonged to control families. Two naturally produced /atta/-pseudowords, one with intermediate and one with long duration of the voiceless dental stop, were used as the deviants embedded among the standard short /ata/ in an oddball paradigm. Six of control Ss participated in the control experiment, in which the positions of the long /atta/ and /ata/ were reversed, the long /atta/ being the standard. In both groups the ERPs to both deviant stimuli differed from those to the standards. The late negative deflection of the differences wave (deviant- minus standard-response) to the long /atta/ was smaller at the left hemisphere in the at risk Ss than in the control Ss. The responses to the intermediate and long /atta/s had two distinct negative deflections in both experiments, whereas the response to the short /ata/ had two distinct peaks only when /ata/ was presented as a deviant in the control experiment. The ERPs in this study seem to reflect mainly processing of acoustic features of the stimuli. However, the occurrence of the second negative peak in the ERP to the /ata/-deviant suggests a possibility of adult like mismatch negativity response (MMN), reflecting in adults processing of change in similar conditions. Group differences indicate that infants at risk for develop mental dyslexia show differences in processing of speech segment durations, as reflected in ERPs, already at this early age compared to infants without such risk. TOPOGRAPHIC ANALYSIS OF BRAIN POTENTIALS IN DYSLEXIC AND NORMAL CHILDREN Robert Licht*a, H.L. Hamburger” & L.H.J. Nyens’ ‘Paedological Institute, Duivendrecht; “Municipal Hospital Slotervaart, Amsterdam, the Netherlands

55

The aim of the present study was to examine whether dyslexic children differ from normal readers in distribution of brain activity during semantic processing in general or only when words have to be decoded. For that purpose a word- and a picture semantic decision task were presented, while EventRelated Potentials (ERPs) were recorded from 21 electrode locations (lo-20 system). In the word task target words consisted of animal names, whereas in the picture task targets consisted of colored line drawings of the same animals. Targets were presented on 33% of the trials. The children were required to respond to targets and nontargets by pressing a button. The resulting ERPs were analyzed by performing adaptive segmentation on the potential map field configuration in order to identify periods of stable landscape orientation of the electrical field generated at the 21 electrode locations. This resulted in four landscapes of which the topography and latencies conform to the well known PlOO, N200, P300 and P3b, respectively. Global Field Power (GFP), latency and scalp locations of the positive and negative centroids for each of the potential maps were analyzed. It was found that the topographic distribution of P3b differed significantly between dyslexic and controls in the word task only. In addition, dyslexics had lower GFP than controls in all landscapes and tasks. The findings suggest that words activate differently located or oriented neuronal generators in dyslexic children than in normal readers, whereas pictures do not.

AUTOMATIC AND CONTROLLED PROCESSING OF PHONETIC CONTRAST IN YOUNG SCHOOLCHIL DREN: COMPARISON OF MMN AND CNV

Valtria Cstpe, Judit Osman-Sbgi and Mark Molnlr Inst. for Psych. Hungarian Academy of Sciences, Dept. of Psychophysiology, Budapest, Hungary

By using event-related potentials (ERPs) the age dependence of automatic and controlled processing of phoneme contrast was investigated in young school-children (6-10 years). ERPs were obtained to digitized syllables /ba:/, /pa:/ and /pa:/ in a passive and in an active paradigm. In the passive oddball /ba:/ served as standard and the two other syllables as deviants. The children were watching cartoons in the passive condition. In the active paradigm the subjects had to judge on syllable pairs and pressing a button when the imperative stimulus (S2) differed from the warning stimulus (Sl). The mismatch negativity (MMN to the deviants in the passive condition, the N2-P3 wavecomplex to the S2 and the contingent negative variation (CNV) preceding the S2 were measured and compared. The MMN to deviation in place of articulation was well defined in most of the children investigated. The MMN to voicing differences, however, showed a large variability in the younger (6-7 years) children. Furthermore, in those children whose MMN was absent to voicing, the reaction to S2 failed and a robust P3 to the S2 occurred.