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Elevated unanticipated acoustic startle reactivity in dyslexia. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Children with dyslexia show heightened emotional sensitivity, demonstrating more robust reactions to emotional stimuli compared to their peers without dyslexia.
  • A study measured facial expressions, skin reactions, and emotional responses to a sudden loud noise, finding that children with dyslexia had greater reactions.
  • Increased physiological responses in children with dyslexia were linked to higher levels of anxiety, suggesting that their stronger emotional reactions may contribute to common anxiety symptoms in this group.

Article Abstract

People with dyslexia, a neurodevelopmental disorder of reading, are highly attuned to the emotional world. Compared with their typically developing peers, children with dyslexia exhibit greater autonomic nervous system reactivity and facial behaviour to emotion- and empathy-inducing film clips. Affective symptoms, such as anxiety, are also more common in children with dyslexia than in those without. Here, we investigated whether the startle response, an automatic reaction that lies at the interface of emotion and reflex, is elevated in dyslexia. We measured facial behaviour, electrodermal reactivity (a sympathetic nervous system measure) and emotional experience in response to a 100 ms, 105 dB unanticipated acoustic startle task in 30 children with dyslexia and 20 comparison children without dyslexia (aged 7-13) who were matched on age, sex and nonverbal reasoning. Our results indicated that the children with dyslexia had greater total facial behaviour and electrodermal reactivity to the acoustic startle task than the children without dyslexia. Across the sample, greater electrodermal reactivity during the startle predicted greater parent-reported anxiety symptoms. These findings contribute to an emerging picture of heightened emotional reactivity in dyslexia and suggest accentuated sympathetic nervous system reactivity may contribute to the elevated anxiety that is often seen in this population.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11257413PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/dys.1779DOI Listing

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