4.4 Article

Neural phoneme discrimination in variable speech in newborns-Associations with dyslexia risk and later language skills

Journal

BRAIN AND COGNITION
Volume 168, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.bandc.2023.105974

Keywords

Infants; Dyslexia; Mismatch responses (MMRs); Phoneme processing; Language learning

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This study explores the importance of phonetic learning readiness in newborns for their emerging language skills. It suggests that problems in learning phonemes may contribute to the phonological deficits observed in dyslexia. The study also found that infants with severe dyslexia in their parents had diminished mismatch responses, indicating difficulties in grouping complex sounds into distinct auditory categories.
A crucial skill in infant language acquisition is learning of the native language phonemes. This requires the ability to group complex sounds into distinct auditory categories based on their shared features. Problems in phonetic learning have been suggested to underlie language learning difficulties in dyslexia, a developmental reading-skill deficit. We investigated auditory abilities important for language acquisition in newborns with or without a familial risk for dyslexia with electrophysiological mismatch responses (MMRs). We presented vowel changes in a sequence of acoustically varying vowels, requiring grouping of the stimuli to two phoneme cate-gories. The vowel changes elicited an MMR which was significantly diminished in infants whose parents had the most severe dyslexia in our sample. Phoneme-MMR amplitude and its hemispheric lateralization were associated with language test outcomes assessed at 28 months, an age at which it becomes possible to behaviourally test children and several standardized tests are available. In addition, statistically significant MMRs to violations of a complex sound-order rule were only found in infants without dyslexia risk, but these results are very preliminary due to small sample size. The results demonstrate the relevance of the newborn infants' readiness for phonetic learning for their emerging language skills. Phoneme extraction difficulties in infants at familial risk may contribute to the phonological deficits observed in dyslexia.

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