Reading-Related Brain Changes in Audiovisual Processing: Cross-Sectional and Longitudinal MEG Evidence
Date
2021Author
Caffarra, Sendy
Lizarazu, Mikel
Molinaro, Nicola
Carreiras, Manuel
Metadata
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Reading-Related Brain Changes in Audiovisual Processing: Cross-Sectional and Longitudinal MEG Evidence Sendy Caffarra, Mikel Lizarazu, Nicola Molinaro, Manuel Carreiras Journal of Neuroscience 7 July 2021, 41 (27) 5867-5875; DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.3021-20.2021
Abstract
The ability to establish associations between visual objects and speech sounds is essential for human reading. Understanding
the neural adjustments required for acquisition of these arbitrary audiovisual associations can shed light on fundamental
reading mechanisms and help reveal how literacy builds on pre-existing brain circuits. To address these questions, the present
longitudinal and cross-sectional MEG studies characterize the temporal and spatial neural correlates of audiovisual syllable
congruency in children (age range, 4–9 years; 22 males and 20 females) learning to read. Both studies showed that during the
first years of reading instruction children gradually set up audiovisual correspondences between letters and speech sounds,
which can be detected within the first 400 ms of a bimodal presentation and recruit the superior portions of the left temporal
cortex. These findings suggest that children progressively change the way they treat audiovisual syllables as a function of their
reading experience. This reading-specific brain plasticity implies (partial) recruitment of pre-existing brain circuits for audiovisual
analysis.