4.6 Article

Electrophysiological and behavioral evidence of auditory processing deficits in children with reading disorder

Journal

CLINICAL NEUROPHYSIOLOGY
Volume 117, Issue 5, Pages 1130-1144

Publisher

ELSEVIER IRELAND LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.clinph.2006.02.001

Keywords

auditory processing disorder; reading disorder; mismatch negativity; phonological awareness; compensated reader

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Objective: The aim of the research was to investigate auditory processing abilities in children with reading disorders using electrophysiological and behavioral tasks. Methods: Differences in auditory processing between control, compensated (age appropriate reading skills with a history of reading disorder), and reading disordered groups were systematically investigated. Results: The reading disorder group had significantly lower results than control and compensated reader groups for most tests in the reading and auditory processing test battery. All children with a reading disorder did not pass at least one behavioral test of auditory processing, and hence would be diagnosed clinically as having an auditory processing disorder (APD). The reading disorder group also had significantly smaller /ga/-evoked mismatch negativity (MMN) area than the control group. Compensated and control groups had similar results for the electrophysiological and behavioral auditory processing tests. Correlation analyses showed, that reading fluency and accuracy and nonword scores (measured using Castle and Coltheart's word/nonword test) correlated significantly with most APD measures. Conclusions: The general profile of auditory processing deficits in children with reading disorder was a combination of deficits on frequency patterns (i.e. frequency pattern test) and absent or small /ga/-evoked MMN. Significant results from the correlation analyses support the comorbidity of reading and auditory processing disorders. Significance: Children with reading disorders are likely to have auditory processing disorders. (c) 2006 International Federation of Clinical Neurophysiology. Published by Elsevier Ireland Ltd. All rights reserved.

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