Right-hemisphere coherence to speech at prereading stages predicts reading performance one year later
Date
2022Author
Ríos-López, Paula
Molinaro, Nicola
Bourguignon, Mathieu
Lallier, Marie
Metadata
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Paula Ríos-López, Nicola Molinaro, Mathieu Bourguignon & Marie Lallier (2022) Right-hemisphere coherence to speech at pre-reading stages predicts reading performance one year later, Journal of Cognitive Psychology, 34:2, 179-193, DOI: 10.1080/20445911.2021.1986514
Journal of Cognitive Psychology
Journal of Cognitive Psychology
Abstract
Neural entrainment to the low-frequency modulations of speech might contribute
significantly to reading acquisition. Still, no previous study has actually attempted to
establish a longitudinal link between them. The present study tested Basque-speaking
children twice: once before reading was formally instructed (t1; 5–6 years old) and
once after they had received a full school year of reading instruction (t2; 6–7 years
old). At t1, speech-brain coherence was recorded via EEG. At t2, in addition to the
coherence measure, reading performance was assessed. Our results show that children
with larger pre-reading delta-band (<1 Hz) speech-brain coherence at right sites of the
scalp performed better in the reading tasks one year later. Overall, our results provide
preliminary support for a relevant contribution of right-hemisphere speech-brain
coherence to successful reading development and point towards pre-reading neural
coherence indexes as useful tools for the early detection of developmental reading
disorders.