6533b85ffe1ef96bd12c277c

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Abnormal functioning of the left temporal lobe in language-impaired children

Pia IsoahoPäivi SivonenPäivi HeleniusLeena IsotaloTimo KauppilaTiina ParviainenSinikka HannusRiitta Salmelin

subject

MaleNeuropsychological TestsSpecific language impairmentAudiologyVocabularyFunctional LateralityLanguage and LinguisticsN400mChildChildrenta515Temporal cortexBrain MappingLanguage Teststa214MEGmedicine.diagnostic_testSpeech perceptionMagnetoencephalographyAuditory responsesTemporal LobeLanguage developmentMemory Short-TermPattern Recognition VisualSpecific language impairmentEvoked Potentials AuditoryFemaleFunctional imagingPsychologyCognitive psychologyLinguistics and Languagemedicine.medical_specialtySpeech perceptionta221Experimental and Cognitive PsychologyDevelopmentLanguage Developmentbehavioral disciplines and activitiesLateralization of brain functionSpeech and HearingTemporal cortexEvent-related potentialReaction TimemedicineHumansta218Auditory CortexAnalysis of VarianceLanguage Disordersta114Working memoryCognitive neuroscienceMagnetoencephalographymedicine.disease

description

Specific language impairment is associated with enduring problems in language-related functions. We followed the spatiotemporal course of cortical activation in SLI using magnetoencephalography. In the experiment, children with normal and impaired language development heard spoken real words and pseudowords presented only once or two times in a row. In typically developing children, the activation in the bilateral superior temporal cortices was attenuated to the second presentation of the same word. In SLI children, this repetition effect was nearly nonexistent in the left hemisphere. Furthermore, the activation was equally strong to words and pseudowords in SLI children whereas in the typically developing children the left hemisphere activation persisted longer for pseudowords than words. Our results indicate that the short-term maintenance of linguistic activation that underlies spoken word recognition is defective in SLI particularly in the left language-dominant hemisphere. The unusually rapid decay of speech-evoked activation can contribute to impaired vocabulary growth.

10.1016/j.bandl.2014.01.005https://doi.org/10.1016/j.bandl.2014.01.005