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Neural entrainment to speech and nonspeech in dyslexia: Conceptual replication and extension of previous investigations

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Date
2021
Author
Lizarazu, Mikel
Scotto di Covella, Lou
van Wassenhove, Virginie
Rivière, Denis
Mizzi, Raphael
Lehongre, Katia
Hertz-Pannier, Lucie
Ramus, Franck
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Mikel Lizarazu, Lou Scotto di Covella, Virginie van Wassenhove, Denis Rivière, Raphael Mizzi, Katia Lehongre, Lucie Hertz-Pannier, Franck Ramus, Neural entrainment to speech and nonspeech in dyslexia: Conceptual replication and extension of previous investigations, Cortex, Volume 137, 2021, Pages 160-178, ISSN 0010-9452, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cortex.2020.12.024.
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/10810/50304
Abstract
Whether phonological deficits in developmental dyslexia are associated with impaired neural sampling of auditory information is still under debate. Previous findings suggested that dyslexic participants showed atypical neural entrainment to slow and/or fast temporal modulations in speech, which might affect prosodic/syllabic and phonemic processing respectively. However, the large methodological variations across these studies do not allow us to draw clear conclusions on the nature of the entrainment deficit in dyslexia. Using magnetoencephalography, we measured neural entrainment to nonspeech and speech in both groups. We first aimed to conceptually replicate previous studies on auditory entrainment in dyslexia, using the same measurement methods as in previous studies, and also using new measurement methods (cross-correlation analyses) to better characterize the synchronization between stimulus and brain response. We failed to observe any of the significant group differences that had previously been reported in delta, theta and gamma frequency bands, whether using speech or nonspeech stimuli. However, when analyzing amplitude cross-correlations between noise stimuli and brain responses, we found that control participants showed larger responses than dyslexic participants in the delta range in the right hemisphere and in the gamma range in the left hemisphere. Overall, our results are weakly consistent with the hypothesis that dyslexic individuals show an atypical entrainment to temporal modulations. Our attempt at replicating previously published results highlights the multiple weaknesses of this research area, particularly low statistical power due to small sample size, and the lack of methodological standards inducing considerable heterogeneity of measurement and analysis methods across studies.
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