In: Children and Language: Development, Impairment … ISBN 978-1-60692-395-5
Editor: Michael A. Reed © 2009 Nova Science Publishers, Inc.
Chapter 4
READING IMPAIRMENT IN CHILDHOOD:
OVERVIEW OF THE ELECTROPHYSIOLOGICAL
CORRELATES OF DEVELOPMENTAL DYSLEXIA
Barbara Penolazzi
1
, Chiara Spironelli
1
and Alessandro Angrilli
1, 2
1
Department of General Psychology, University of Padova,
Via Venezia 8, 35131 Padova, Italy
2
CNR Institute of Neuroscience, Padova section, Italy
ABSTRACT
Electrophysiological measurements enabled us to greatly increase our knowledge on the
most spread learning disability in childhood represented by the Developmental Dyslexia
(DD). The present chapter reviews the most relevant studies, which used either Event Related
Potentials (ERPs) or Electroencephalographic (EEG) bands to investigate reading disabilities
in developmental age. Several studies are here described, which succeeded in showing
processing abnormalities not only in dyslexics, but also in children genetically at risk of
dyslexia, through the analysis of both the "classical" electrophysiological components (i.e.,
MMN, P300, N400) and earlier evoked potentials. The electrophysiological markers of
neuronal dysfunctions found in these children, helped scientists to uncover the
psychophysiological mechanisms chiefly involved in this language disorder. These are:
deficits in speech sound processing and impairment in manipulating the phonological features
of grapheme strings. A considerable advance in the field has been recently reached by using
EEG bands, traditionally used for detecting group differences in resting state, but currently
extended to the measure of cognitive activation obtained through different experimental tasks.
Such studies revealed functional differences in both fast and slow EEG rhythms between
dyslexics and controls. The use of two functionally distinct EEG rhythms, theta and beta
bands, in line with several ERP results, supports the view that dyslexics' reading difficulties
are related to a linguistic impairment which is represented essentially at phonological level.
Similar conclusions were further supported by the analysis of delta rhythm - a functional
marker of cortical inhibition - during the performance of different linguistic tasks. Group