This study aims at investigating the role of low-gamma activity in phonemic encoding and its implication in dyslexia. Indeed, a phonological deficit, i.e. a difficulty in perceiving the sounds of speech, is strongly suspected in dyslexia but has never been conclusively associated with a specific underlying mechanism. The study employs transcranial alternating current stimulation in adults with and without dyslexia to exploit the effect of the stimulation on phonemic processing and neural activity measured with electroencephalography. In doing so, it would be possible to establishing a causal link between gamma oscillations and the phonological deficit in dyslexia.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NA
Purpose
BASIC_SCIENCE
Masking
SINGLE
Enrollment
30
Focal transcranial stimulation over auditory cortex by means of 5 electrodes delivering an electric current (max. 2mA). In addition to active stimulation, also a placebo (sham) stimulation is employed as a control condition. All subjects included in the study receive all tACS stimulation conditions.
Campus Biotech Geneva
Geneva, Switzerland
Measure low-gamma neural oscillations with electroencephalography recordings
Auditory-steady state responses to auditory stimuli are measured to assess specific differences between individuals with dyslexia and normo-readers, and between the different tACS stimulation conditions before, after and 1h after the 20 min. tACS stimulation. These neural correlated are estimated by considering the power of EEG signal at the frequency used to modulate the auditory stimuli.
Time frame: 6 hour
Changes in linguistic performance through a battery of behavioral tests
Measurement of phonemic and syllabic processing (pseudoword repetition and spoonerism test), and reading (reading a 3 min. text, both accuracy and reading speed are considered) skills. These tests are repeated before, after and 1h after the tACS stimulation.
Time frame: 6 hours
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