Purpose: The authors investigated the neurophysiological bases of vowel perception in children with specific language impairment (SLI) compared with typical language development (TLD) controls using 250-ms phonetically similar vowels. In a previous study, children with SLI showed a poor neurophysiological response (the mismatch negativity [MMN]) to 50-ms versions of these vowels, regardless of whether attention was directed to (attend) or away (passive) from the auditory modality (V. Shafer, M.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe used neurophysiological and behavioral measures to examine whether children with specific language impairment (SLI) have deficits in automatic processing of brief, phonetically similar vowels, and whether attention plays a role in such deficits. The neurophysiological measure mismatch negativity (MMN) was used as an index of discrimination in two tasks; one in which children ignored the auditory stimuli and watched a silent video and a second in which they attended to the auditory modality. Children with SLI showed good behavioral discrimination, but significantly poorer behavioral identification of the brief vowels than the children with typical language development (TLD).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn a first experiment, we recorded event-related-potentials (ERPs) to "the" followed by meaningful words (Story) versus "the" followed by nonsense syllables (Nonse). Left and right lateral anterior positivities (LAPs) were seen from the onset of "the" up to 200 ms in both conditions. Later than 200 ms following the onset of "the", the left and right LAPs continued for "the" in the Story, but were replaced by a negativity in the Nonse Condition.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjective: To systematically investigate the combined effects of sensorineural hearing loss and prescribed personal hearing aid(s) on cortical event-related potentials (ERPs) (waves N1, MMN, N2b, and P3b) and their related behavioral measures of discrimination (d-prime sensitivity and reaction time) to the speech sounds /ba/ and /da/ presented at 65 and 80 dB peak-to-peak equivalent SPL.
Design: Cortical ERPs were recorded to /ba/ and /da/ speech stimuli presented at 65 and 80 dB peak-to-peak equivalent SPL from 20 normal-hearing adults and 14 adults with sensorineural hearing losses. The degree of sensorineural impairment at 1000 to 2000 Hz ranged from moderate losses (50 to 74 dB HL) to severe-profound losses (75 to 120 dB HL).
This study examined whether experience with a native language affected processing of a place-of-articulation feature. In Experiment 1, 10 stimuli from a continuum of synthesized Hindi bilabial, dental and retroflexed stops were presented to English and Hindi speakers to examine discrimination and identification across the bilabial/dental and dental/retroflexed boundaries. In an oddball task designed to elicit mismatch negativity (MMN), subjects ignored these stimuli while their brain activity was recorded.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjective: Auditory evoked potentials provide the opportunity to better understand the central processing of auditory stimuli, which is the basis of speech and language perception. The purpose of this study was to examine maturational changes in the topography of one of these auditory evoked potentials, the mismatch negativity (MMN), using scalp current density (SCD) analysis.
Design: Subjects were children ages 4 to 11 yr (N = 53), and adults (N = 12).
Objective: To investigate systematically the effects of sensorineural hearing loss on cortical event-related potentials (ERPs) N1, MMN, N2 and P3 and their associated behavioral measures (d' sensitivity and reaction time) to the speech sounds /ba/ and /da/ presented at 65 and 80 dB ppe SPL.
Design: Cortical ERPs were recorded to /ba/ and /da/ speech stimuli presented at 65 and 80 dB ppe SPL from 20 normal-hearing adults and 20 adults who are hearing impaired. The degree of sensorineural impairments at 1000 to 2000 Hz ranged from mild losses (defined as 25 to 49 dB HL) to severe/profound losses (75 to 120 dB HL).
Objective: 1) To determine whether an adult-like mismatch negativity (MMN) can be reliably elicited in typically developing awake infants and preschool children, and if so 2) to examine whether maturational changes exist in MMN latencyand amplitude.
Design: Two experiments were designed to elicit MMN using an "oddball" paradigm. In Experiment 1, a 1000-Hz tone served as the standard stimulus and a 1200-Hz tone as the deviant.
Brain Res Dev Brain Res
August 2001
This paper examines maturational changes in the spatiotemporal features of central and lateral N1 components of the auditory evoked potentials (AEPs) to tone stimuli presented with a long stimulus onset asyncrony (SOA; 4200 ms) using the scalp current density (SCD) technique. A group of typically developing children ranging from 6 to 12 years of age and a group of adults were studied. Recently studies have begun to explore the topography of these components in children.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRecent investigations of children with specific language impairment (SLI) have found deviant anatomical asymmetry of the perisylvian cortex. These studies argue that this deviant anatomical asymmetry is linked to the language disorders of SLI children. To date no studies have examined whether deviant functional asymmetry underlies the processing of spoken language in these children.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDeviant anatomical asymmetry of perisylvian cortex is argued to be linked to specific language impairment (SLI). However, no studies have examined whether deviant functional asymmetry underlies the processing of spoken language. In the current study, brain-electrical activity was recorded from 31 scalp sites to the function word 'the' embedded in auditorally presented stories and nonsense contexts.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPsychophysiology
November 2000
Attention has been shown to modulate the amplitude of the mismatch negativity (MMN) elicited by a small deviation in auditory stimuli in adults. The present study examined the effects of attention and deviant size on MMN amplitude in children. Children and adults were presented with sequences of tones containing standards (1000 Hz) and three deviants varying in degree of deviance from the standard (1050, 1200, and 1500 Hz).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjective: Event-related potentials were recorded to investigate the maturation of auditory processing in school-age children.
Design: The mismatch negativity (MMN) was obtained in an oddball tone discrimination paradigm in 66 school-age children and 12 adults. In the children's data, a prominent negativity to both the standard and deviant tone, peaking around 200 msec, was observed, and compared with the N1 auditory evoked potential component.
This study investigated the effects of decreased audibility produced by high-pass noise masking on the cortical event-related potentials (ERPs) N1 and mismatch negativity (MMN) to the speech sounds /ba/ and /da/, presented at 65 dB SPL. ERPs were recorded while normal listeners (N = 11) ignored the stimuli and read a book. Broadband masking noise was simultaneously presented at an intensity sufficient to mask the response to the speech sounds, and subsequently high-pass filtered.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn behavioral studies, children's memory for tonal frequency has been found to persist for less time than adults' (T. A. Keller & N.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThis study investigated the effects of decreased audibility produced by high-pass noise masking on cortical event-related potentials (ERPs) N1, N2, and P3 to the speech sounds /ba/and/da/presented at 65 and 80 dB SPL. Normal-hearing subjects pressed a button in response to the deviant sound in an oddball paradigm. Broadband masking noise was presented at an intensity sufficient to completely mask the response to the 65-dB SPL speech sounds, and subsequently high-pass filtered at 4000, 2000, 1000, 500, and 250 Hz.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe present study examined the extent to which verbal auditory agnosia (VAA) is primarily a phonemic decoding disorder, as contrasted to a more global defect in acoustic processing. Subjects were six young adults who presented with VAA in childhood and who, at the time of testing, showed varying degrees of residual auditory discrimination impairment. They were compared to a group of young adults with normal language development matched for age and gender.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe predictive utility of three aspects of neonatal neurobehavioral performance was examined in 144 very low birth weight (< 1500 g) preterms who were followed until 6 years of age. Visual-following and auditory-orienting composites derived from the Einstein Neonatal Neurobehavioral Assessment Scale were modestly related to the Mental Developmental Index (MDI) and IQ scores at several ages, whereas the active motility composite was only related to MDI scores at 1 year of age (corrected). Infants who showed deviant performance on both visual following and auditory orienting composites had significantly lower cognitive test scores at 1 and 6 years of age and were more likely to be classified as subaverage at 6 years of age (IQ < 85).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThere is wide interest in the clinical application of mismatch negativity (MMN) to assess discriminative capabilities in individuals whose auditory capacities are difficult to determine, including infants, young children and those with severe cognitive impairment. Before MMN can be used as a clinical electrophysiologic measure, it is necessary to establish that it can be reliably elicited in normal individuals. This chapter describes a detailed analysis of MMN recorded in a group of healthy 8-yr-old children to assess intrasubject and intersubject reliability of the response.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFElectroencephalogr Clin Neurophysiol
May 1992
Auditory event-related potentials (ERPs) were recorded in a "double oddball" paradigm requiring an easy and a hard pitch discrimination from multiple sclerosis (MS) patients with and without dementia, and a group of age and sex matched normal subjects. Cognitive function was assessed by a short battery of neuropsychologic (NP) tests, and the two groups of MS patients were selected on the basis of substantial non-overlapping degrees of cognitive deficit in the demented as compared to the non-demented group. The N100, P200 and P300 ERP components were longer in latency in the demented patients, and the N100-P300 interval was prolonged as well, compared to the non-demented patients, whose ERP latencies did not differ from those of the normal subjects.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFVisual evoked potentials (VEPs) were recorded of 60 infants and children with cerebral blindness, aged between six weeks and 10 years, and compared with age-matched normative data. Every patient had abnormal VEPs. 18 had absent flash and pattern VEPs and 13 had atypical or atypical and asymmetrical flash and pattern VEPs.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFOne child in 750 is born with a handicapping hearing impairment. The methods available to screen and evaluate infants at risk (auditory brainstem responses, middle latency responses, and cortical auditory evoked potentials) are reviewed, explained, and illustrated with case histories.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFElectroencephalogr Clin Neurophysiol
October 1989
Cortical auditory evoked potentials (AEPs) to the synthesized syllables [da[ and [ta[ and to the isolated 3 formants of [da[ were obtained from 32 normal infants studied at monthly intervals from birth through 3 months and at 6 months of age. A bilateral array of 16 electrodes referenced to the mid-occiput permitted a topographic analysis of the cortical AEPs at selected latencies. A differential maturational sequence was seen: a predominantly negative cortical AEP wave form became positive, first over the frontocentral region (around term), and then over the temporal region (at 1-2 months).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA 39-year-old intravenous drug user presented with dysarthria and a syndrome of the left cerebellar hemisphere. While in hospital, he developed progressive brainstem findings. Repeated CT scans revealed a lucency in the white matter of the left cerebellar hemisphere.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFElectroencephalogr Clin Neurophysiol
February 1988
One hundred and eleven patients with suspected multiple sclerosis (64 possible, 47 probable) and 16 with a definite diagnosis of MS were evaluated with pattern-reversal visual evoked potentials (VEPs), employing monocular full-field checks subtending 7', 14' and 28' of visual angle, and right and left hemifield 28' checks. Thirty-seven patients (29%) had a completely normal study. Sixty-six patients (52%) had abnormal responses to full-field 28' checks, and in 13 (10%) of these, additional abnormalities were found in one or more of the other test conditions, which indicated the presence of an additional site of dysfunction in the visual pathway.
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