Publication | Closed Access
Cerebral laterality for phonemic and prosodic cue decoding in children with autism
64
Citations
24
References
2009
Year
NeurolinguisticsLanguage DevelopmentProsodic Cue DecodingAtypical Language DevelopmentPhonologySocial SciencesAutism Spectrum DisorderNeurodiversityPhoneticsChild LanguageAutismLanguage StudiesFunctional AsymmetryDevelopmental DisorderCognitive ScienceSyndromic AutismSpeech ProductionCerebral LateralitySpeech CommunicationNeurodevelopmental DisordersAsd ChildrenPediatricsNeuroscienceSpeech Perception
This study examined the cerebral functional lateralization, from a phonological perspective, in children with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) and typically developing children (TDC). With near infrared spectroscopy, we measured auditory evoked-responses in the temporal areas to phonemic and prosodic contrasts in word contexts. The results of TDC showed stronger left-dominant and right-dominant responses to phonemic and prosodic differences, respectively. Furthermore, although ASD children displayed similar tendencies, the functional asymmetry for phonemic changes was relatively weak, suggesting less-specialized left-brain functions. The typical asymmetry for the prosodic condition was further discussed in terms of acoustic-physical perceptual ability of ASD children. The study revealed differential neural recruitment in decoding phonetic cues between ASD children and TDC and verified the applicability of near infrared spectroscopy as a suitable neuroimaging method for children with developmental disorders.
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