Shaylyn Kress , Josh Neudorf , Chelsea Ekstrand , Ron Borowsky
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引用次数: 0
摘要
注意过程是确保成功阅读的关键,阅读障碍理论提出,功能失调的注意网络可能导致观察到的阅读缺陷。本研究的目的是定位参与阅读和注意的额眼场(FEF)区域,并检查其与阅读和注意网络区域的连通性,已知FEF在注意过程中的作用和理论在阅读中的作用。在实验1中,我们回顾了之前阅读和注意力混合研究的结果。我们观察到FEF中BOLD强度的显著阅读 × 注意相互作用,特别是Brodmann's Area 6 (A6vl)的腹外侧部分。在实验2中,我们使用Human Connectome Project扩散张量成像数据来检测FEF-A6vl的连接特征。我们观察到A6vl和基底神经节之间的高度沟通(在音节加工过程中,基底神经节在节奏中起作用)。这些连接支持止于小脑小腿I/II(在眼球运动和语义学中起作用)和大脑顶叶上小叶(在注意定向和语音解码中起作用)的束簇。本研究的结果阐明了FEF-A6vl的阅读 × 注意相互作用,并可能对开发改善阅读障碍个体阅读的治疗方法具有启示意义。
Exploring the interaction of reading and attention through connectivity with the frontal-eye-field
Attentional processes are crucial to ensure successful reading, and theories of dyslexia propose that dysfunctional attention networks may contribute to the observed reading deficits. The goals of this study were to localize a region of the frontal-eye-field (FEF) involved in both reading and attention and examine its connectivity with regions in the reading and attention networks, given the known role of the FEF in attentional processes and theorized role in reading. In Experiment 1, we revisited the results of our previous hybrid reading and attention study. We observed a significant reading × attention interaction in BOLD intensity in the FEF, specifically the ventrolateral portion of Brodmann’s Area 6 (A6vl). In Experiment 2, we used Human Connectome Project diffusion tensor imaging data to examine the connectivity profile of the FEF-A6vl. We observed high communicability between the A6vl and basal ganglia (which plays a role in rhythm during syllabic processing). These connections support tract clusters which terminated in the cerebellar Crus I/II (which play roles in eye movements and semantics) and cerebral superior parietal lobule (which plays a role in attentional orienting and phonetic decoding). The results of this study elucidate the reading × attention interaction in the FEF-A6vl, and may have implications for developing treatments to improve reading in individuals with dyslexia.
期刊介绍:
Neuroscience publishes papers describing the results of original research on any aspect of the scientific study of the nervous system. Any paper, however short, will be considered for publication provided that it reports significant, new and carefully confirmed findings with full experimental details.