Electrophysiological Correlates of Dyslexic Subtypes

Author:

Flynn Jane M.1,Deering William2,Goldstein Michael3,Rahbar Mohammad Hossein4

Affiliation:

1. Jane M. Flynn is a research scientist in cognitive neurosciences at Gundersen Medical Foundation, LaCrosse, Wisconsin. She received her PhD from the University of Minnesota, Minneapolis. Address: Jane M. Flynn, Dyslexia Research Center, Gundersen Clinic, 1836 South Ave., LaCrosse, WI 54601.

2. William Deering is a pediatric neurologist at Gundersen Clinic, LaCrosse, Wisconsin. He received his medical degree from the University of Washington, Seattle.

3. Michael Goldstein is an associate professor of psychiatry at the Medical College of Wisconsin in Milwaukee. He received his PhD from the University of Wisconsin (Madison) in physiological psychology and research in respecialization training in clinical psychology at Kent State University.

4. Mohammad Hossein Rahbar is a professor in the Mathematics Department of the University of Wisconsin-LaCrosse. He received his PhD degree from Michigan State University in statistics.

Abstract

The construct validity of Boder's typology of dyslexia was investigated using quantified EEG. Thirty-nine children, ranging in age from 7-0 to 10-11, were recorded during a contextual reading task and at rest. During reading, children with dyslexia were expected to show increased theta and beta amplitude compared to nondisabled readers. These differences were expected in regions of presumed strength for each subtype as a sign of overengagement in task. Children with phonological deficits (dysphonetic dyslexia) were expected to adopt visuospatial processing strategies (right occipital-parietal activation), those with orthographic deficits (dyseidetic dyslexia) to emphasize phonetic strategies (left temporal-parietal activation). Results supported beta frequency differences in anticipated regions by subtype during the reading task. However, the direction of difference hypothesis was not supported. Decreased amplitudes in both groups with dyslexia compared to normally achieving readers suggest reconceptualization of the theoretical base for the Boder subtyping system.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

General Health Professions,Education,Health(social science)

Reference48 articles.

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