227 results on '"Pol Ghesquière"'
Search Results
2. Cortical Structure in Pre-Readers at Cognitive Risk for Dyslexia: Baseline Differences and Response to Intervention
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Maria Economou, Femke Vanden Bempt, Shauni Van Herck, Toivo Glatz, Jan Wouters, Pol Ghesquière, Jolijn Vanderauwera, and Maaike Vandermosten
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Language. Linguistic theory. Comparative grammar ,P101-410 ,Neurophysiology and neuropsychology ,QP351-495 - Published
- 2024
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3. Role of Family Risk and of Pre-Reading Auditory and Neurostructural Measures in Predicting Reading Outcome
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Lauren Blockmans, Narly Golestani, Josué Luiz Dalboni da Rocha, Jan Wouters, Pol Ghesquière, and Maaike Vandermosten
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Language. Linguistic theory. Comparative grammar ,P101-410 ,Neurophysiology and neuropsychology ,QP351-495 - Published
- 2023
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4. Pulsatile modulation greatly enhances neural synchronization at syllable rate in children
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Shauni Van Herck, Maria Economou, Femke Vanden Bempt, Pol Ghesquière, Maaike Vandermosten, and Jan Wouters
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Neural synchronization ,Auditory steady state response ,Amplitude modulation ,Development ,Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry ,RC321-571 - Abstract
Neural processing of the speech envelope is of crucial importance for speech perception and comprehension. This envelope processing is often investigated by measuring neural synchronization to sinusoidal amplitude-modulated stimuli at different modulation frequencies. However, it has been argued that these stimuli lack ecological validity. Pulsatile amplitude-modulated stimuli, on the other hand, are suggested to be more ecologically valid and efficient, and have increased potential to uncover the neural mechanisms behind some developmental disorders such a dyslexia. Nonetheless, pulsatile stimuli have not yet been investigated in pre-reading and beginning reading children, which is a crucial age for developmental reading research. We performed a longitudinal study to examine the potential of pulsatile stimuli in this age range. Fifty-two typically reading children were tested at three time points from the middle of their last year of kindergarten (5 years old) to the end of first grade (7 years old). Using electroencephalography, we measured neural synchronization to syllable rate and phoneme rate sinusoidal and pulsatile amplitude-modulated stimuli. Our results revealed that the pulsatile stimuli significantly enhance neural synchronization at syllable rate, compared to the sinusoidal stimuli. Additionally, the pulsatile stimuli at syllable rate elicited a different hemispheric specialization, more closely resembling natural speech envelope tracking. We postulate that using the pulsatile stimuli greatly increases EEG data acquisition efficiency compared to the common sinusoidal amplitude-modulated stimuli in research in younger children and in developmental reading research.
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- 2023
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5. Cognitive Profiles in Preschool Children at Risk for Co-Occurring Dyslexia and ADHD
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Silke Kellens, Dieter Baeyens, and Pol Ghesquière
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dyslexia ,ADHD ,preschool ,cognition ,executive function ,phonological processing ,Education - Abstract
Developmental dyslexia and attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) co-occur in 15–40% of individuals diagnosed with one disorder. Despite substantial research on the cognitive profiles of preschoolers at risk for either dyslexia or ADHD, studies have neglected children at risk for co-occurring dyslexia and ADHD. Thus, our study compared the cognitive profile of preschoolers at risk for dyslexia with the profile of children at risk for co-occurring dyslexia and ADHD. We assessed 50 preschoolers at dyslexia risk (DR), 50 at dyslexia + ADHD risk (DAR), and 48 without risk (NR) (Mage = 67 months). Our assessment encompassed phonological processing, executive functioning (EF), receptive vocabulary, and processing speed. Principal component analysis revealed two distinct components within the measures of EF, a verbal short-term memory and an EF component. ANOVA revealed that the NR group outperformed risk groups across measures, except for cognitive flexibility and delay of gratification. Notably, the DR and DAR groups did not differ in most measures but showed near-significant differences on the EF component, with the DR group having higher composite scores than the DAR group. In conclusion, ADHD risk did not impact the cognitive performance of children at risk for dyslexia but might amplify EF problems that at-risk preschoolers encounter.
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- 2024
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6. Speech perception deficits and the effect of envelope-enhanced story listening combined with phonics intervention in pre-readers at risk for dyslexia
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Femke Vanden Bempt, Shauni Van Herck, Maria Economou, Jolijn Vanderauwera, Maaike Vandermosten, Jan Wouters, and Pol Ghesquière
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dyslexia ,speech perception deficits ,auditory intervention ,pre-readers ,preventive ,Psychology ,BF1-990 - Abstract
Developmental dyslexia is considered to be most effectively addressed with preventive phonics-based interventions, including grapheme-phoneme coupling and blending exercises. These intervention types require intact speech perception abilities, given their large focus on exercises with auditorily presented phonemes. Yet some children with (a risk for) dyslexia experience problems in this domain due to a poorer sensitivity to rise times, i.e., rhythmic acoustic cues present in the speech envelope. As a result, the often subtle speech perception problems could potentially constrain an optimal response to phonics-based interventions in at-risk children. The current study therefore aimed (1) to extend existing research by examining the presence of potential speech perception deficits in pre-readers at cognitive risk for dyslexia when compared to typically developing peers and (2) to explore the added value of a preventive auditory intervention for at-risk pre-readers, targeting rise time sensitivity, on speech perception and other reading-related skills. To obtain the first research objective, we longitudinally compared speech-in-noise perception between 28 5-year-old pre-readers with and 30 peers without a cognitive risk for dyslexia during the second half of the third year of kindergarten. The second research objective was addressed by exploring growth in speech perception and other reading-related skills in an independent sample of 62 at-risk 5-year-old pre-readers who all combined a 12-week preventive phonics-based intervention (GraphoGame-Flemish) with an auditory story listening intervention. In half of the sample, story recordings contained artificially enhanced rise times (GG-FL_EE group, n = 31), while in the other half, stories remained unprocessed (GG-FL_NE group, n = 31; Clinical Trial Number S60962—https://www.uzleuven.be/nl/clinical-trial-center). Results revealed a slower speech-in-noise perception growth in the at-risk compared to the non-at-risk group, due to an emerged deficit at the end of kindergarten. Concerning the auditory intervention effects, both intervention groups showed equal growth in speech-in-noise perception and other reading-related skills, suggesting no boost of envelope-enhanced story listening on top of the effect of combining GraphoGame-Flemish with listening to unprocessed stories. These findings thus provide evidence for a link between speech perception problems and dyslexia, yet do not support the potential of the auditory intervention in its current form.
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- 2022
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7. Development of Atypical Reading at Ages 5 to 9 Years and Processing of Speech Envelope Modulations in the Brain
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Raúl Granados Barbero, Pol Ghesquière, and Jan Wouters
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dyslexia ,neural entrainment ,auditory steady-state response (ASSR) ,source analysis ,ICA ,DSS ,Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry ,RC321-571 - Abstract
Different studies have suggested that during speech processing readers with dyslexia present atypical levels of neural entrainment as well as atypical functional hemispherical asymmetries in comparison with typical readers. In this study, we evaluated these differences in children and the variation with age before and after starting with formal reading instruction. Synchronized neural auditory processing activity was quantified based on auditory steady-state responses (ASSRs) from EEG recordings. The stimulation was modulated at syllabic and phonemic fluctuation rates present in speech. We measured the brain activation patterns and the hemispherical asymmetries in children at three age points (5, 7, and 9 years old). Despite the well-known heterogeneity during developmental stages, especially in children and in dyslexia, we could extract meaningful common oscillatory patterns. The analyses included (1) the estimations of source localization, (2) hemispherical preferences using a laterality index, measures of neural entrainment, (3) signal-to-noise ratios (SNRs), and (4) connectivity using phase coherence measures. In this longitudinal study, we confirmed that the existence of atypical levels of neural entrainment and connectivity already exists at pre-reading stages. Overall, these measures reflected a lower ability of the dyslectic brain to synchronize with syllabic rate stimulation. In addition, our findings reinforced the hypothesis of a later maturation of the processing of beta rhythms in dyslexia. This investigation emphasizes the importance of longitudinal studies in dyslexia, especially in children, where neural oscillatory patterns as well as differences between typical and atypical developing children can vary in the span of a year.
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- 2022
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8. Afwijkingen in het neurale leesnetwerk bij kinderen met dyslexie voor en gedurende de leesontwikkeling
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Jolijn Vanderauwera, Pol Ghesquière, Jan Wouters, and Maaike Vandermosten
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Language and Literature ,Pathology ,RB1-214 - Abstract
Hoewel de meeste kinderen vlot leren lezen, is dit niet voor iedereen het geval. Sommige kinderen ontwikkelen dyslexie, gekenmerkt door ernstige en hardnekkige problemen bij het leren lezen die in de meeste gevallen persisteren door de tijd, tot op het niveau van gevorderde lezers. Het is bekend dat de groep van personen met dyslexie atypische afwijkingen vertoont in de hersenen ten opzichte van typische lezers. Het is echter nog niet bekend of deze verschillen het gevolg zijn van de belemmerde leesontwikkeling, of er juist aan de basis van liggen. Met het oog op vroege en geïndividualiseerde interventie, is het belangrijk om inzicht te verwerven in de oorzakelijke factoren van dyslexie. Daarom werden in het afgelopen decennium een aantal longitudinale studies uitgevoerd die startten voor aanvang van de leesontwikkeling en de leesontwikkeling volgden aan de hand van gedragsmetingen en metingen van neurale kenmerken van het leesnetwerk. Deze studies werden steeds uitgevoerd bij een groep van kinderen die een verhoogd risico op dyslexie vertoonden, bijvoorbeeld vanwege een familiale voorgeschiedenis van dyslexie, of van een cognitief risicoprofiel. In dit artikel gaan we verder in op de resultaten van deze studies; meer specifiek op de structurele neurale verbindingen van het leesnetwerk en op recente inzichten met betrekking tot de structurele plasticiteit van deze wittestofbanen als gevolg van specifieke leesinterventies. Deze studies bieden inzicht in de manier waarop interventies een impact kunnen hebben op de neurale leesprocessen en dit zowel voor beginnende als gevorderde lezers.
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- 2022
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9. Feasibility, Enjoyment, and Language Comprehension Impact of a Tablet- and GameFlow-Based Story-Listening Game for Kindergarteners: Methodological and Mixed Methods Study
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Femke Vanden Bempt, Maria Economou, Ward Dehairs, Maaike Vandermosten, Jan Wouters, Pol Ghesquière, and Jolijn Vanderauwera
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Information technology ,T58.5-58.64 ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
BackgroundEnjoyment plays a key role in the success and feasibility of serious gaming interventions. Unenjoyable games will not be played, and in the case of serious gaming, learning will not occur. Therefore, a so-called GameFlow model has been developed, which intends to guide (serious) game developers in the process of creating and evaluating enjoyment in digital (serious) games. Regarding language learning, a variety of serious games targeting specific language components exist in the market, albeit often without available assessments of enjoyment or feasibility. ObjectiveThis study evaluates the enjoyment and feasibility of a tablet-based, serious story-listening game for kindergarteners, developed based on the principles of the GameFlow model. This study also preliminarily explores the possibility of using the game to foster language comprehension. MethodsWithin the framework of a broader preventive reading intervention, 91 kindergarteners aged 5 years with a cognitive risk for dyslexia were asked to play the story game for 12 weeks, 6 days per week, either combined with a tablet-based phonics intervention or control games. The story game involved listening to and rating stories and responding to content-related questions. Game enjoyment was assessed through postintervention questionnaires, a GameFlow-based evaluation, and in-game story rating data. Feasibility was determined based on in-game general question response accuracy (QRA), reflecting the difficulty level, attrition rate, and final game exposure and training duration. Moreover, to investigate whether game enjoyment and difficulty influenced feasibility, final game exposure and training duration were predicted based on the in-game initial story ratings and initial QRA. Possible growth in language comprehension was explored by analyzing in-game QRA as a function of the game phase and baseline language skills. ResultsEventually, data from 82 participants were analyzed. The questionnaire and in-game data suggested an overall enjoyable game experience. However, the GameFlow-based evaluation implied room for game design improvement. The general QRA confirmed a well-adapted level of difficulty for the target sample. Moreover, despite the overall attrition rate of 39% (32/82), 90% (74/82) of the participants still completed 80% of the game, albeit with a large variation in training days. Higher initial QRA significantly increased game exposure (β=.35; P
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- 2022
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10. Digital Game-Based Phonics Instruction Promotes Print Knowledge in Pre-Readers at Cognitive Risk for Dyslexia
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Femke Vanden Bempt, Maria Economou, Shauni Van Herck, Jolijn Vanderauwera, Toivo Glatz, Maaike Vandermosten, Jan Wouters, and Pol Ghesquière
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dyslexia ,game-based intervention ,pre-readers ,phonics instruction ,preventive ,Psychology ,BF1-990 - Abstract
Dyslexia is targeted most effectively when (1) interventions are provided preventively, before the onset of reading instruction, and (2) remediation programs combine letter-sound training with phoneme blending. Given the growing potential of technology in educational contexts, there has been a considerable increase of letter-sound trainings embedded in digital serious games. One such intervention is GraphoGame. Yet, current evidence on the preventive impact of GraphoGame is limited by the lack of adaptation of the original learning content to the skills of pre-readers, short training duration, and a restricted focus on explicitly trained skills. Therefore, the current study aims at investigating the impact of a preventive, and pre-reading adapted GraphoGame training (i.e., GraphoGame-Flemish, GG-FL) on explicitly trained skills and non-specifically trained phonological and language abilities. Following a large-scale screening (N = 1225), the current study included 88 pre-reading kindergarteners at cognitive risk for dyslexia who were assigned to three groups training either with GG-FL (n = 31), an active control game (n = 29), or no game (n = 28). Before and after the 12-week intervention, a variety of reading-related skills were assessed. Moreover, receptive letter knowledge and phonological awareness were measured every three weeks during the intervention period. Results revealed significantly larger improvements in the GG-FL group on explicitly trained skills, i.e., letter knowledge and word decoding, without finding transfer-effects to untrained phonological and language abilities. Our findings imply a GG-FL-driven head start on early literacy skills in at-risk children. A follow-up study should uncover the long-term impact and the ability of GG-FL to prevent actual reading failure.
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- 2021
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11. A three-time point longitudinal investigation of the arcuate fasciculus throughout reading acquisition in children developing dyslexia
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Stijn Van Der Auwera, Maaike Vandermosten, Jan Wouters, Pol Ghesquière, and Jolijn Vanderauwera
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Developmental dyslexia ,Reading ,White matter ,Diffusion Tensor Imaging ,Automated Fiber Quantification ,Longitudinal design ,Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry ,RC321-571 - Abstract
Although the neural basis of dyslexia has intensively been investigated, results are still unclear about the existence of a white matter deficit in the arcuate fasciculus (AF) throughout development. To unravel this ambiguity, we examined the difference in fractional anisotropy (FA) of the AF between children developing dyslexia and children developing typical reading skills in a longitudinal sample with three MRI time points throughout reading development: the pre-reading stage (5–6 years old), the early reading stage (7–8 years old) and the advanced reading stage (9–10 years old). Applying along-the-tract analyses of white matter organization, our results confirmed that a white matter deficit existed in the left AF prior to the onset of formal reading instruction in children who developed dyslexia later on. This deficit was consistently present throughout the course of reading development. Additionally, we evaluated the use of applying a continuous approach on the participants’ reading skills rather than the arbitrary categorization in individuals with or without dyslexia. Our results confirmed the predictive relation between FA and word reading measurements later in development. This study supports the use of longitudinal approaches to investigate the neural basis of the developmental process of learning to read and the application of triangulation, i.e. using multiple research approaches to help gain more insight and aiding the interpretation of obtained results.
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- 2021
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12. Is the Long-Term Association Between Symbolic Numerical Magnitude Processing and Arithmetic Bi-Directional?
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Kiran Vanbinst, Pol Ghesquière, and Bert De Smedt
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6-year longitudinal design ,symbolic numerical magnitude processing ,arithmetic ,bi-directionality ,Psychology ,BF1-990 ,Mathematics ,QA1-939 - Abstract
By analyzing longitudinal data from the start to the end of primary education, we aimed to investigate whether symbolic numerical magnitude processing at the start of primary education predicted arithmetic at the end, and whether arithmetic at the start of primary education predicted later symbolic numerical magnitude processing skills at the end. In the first grade (start) and sixth grade (end) of primary education, the same group of children’s symbolic numerical magnitude processing skills and arithmetic competence were assessed. We were particularly interested in exploring the direction of the association between symbolic numerical magnitude processing and arithmetic and observed that this association was bi-directional across primary education. Symbolic numerical magnitude processing skills in first grade predicted arithmetic in sixth grade; but also the reversed direction turned out significant: Early arithmetic predicted later symbolic numerical magnitude processing skills. Both directions remained significant after controlling for motor speed and nonverbal reasoning. Critically, when controlling for auto-regressive effects of prior abilities, the symbolic comparison-arithmetic association was no longer significant, the reversed direction became marginally significant. This suggests that children’s arithmetic development across primary education to some extent strengthens their ability to process the numerical meaning of Arabic digits.
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- 2019
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13. The relation between neurofunctional and neurostructural determinants of phonological processing in pre-readers
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Astrid De Vos, Jolijn Vanderauwera, Sophie Vanvooren, Maaike Vandermosten, Pol Ghesquière, and Jan Wouters
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Arcuate fasciculus ,Auditory steady-state responses ,Diffusion MRI ,Neural synchronization ,Phonological processing ,Pre-reading ,Neurophysiology and neuropsychology ,QP351-495 - Abstract
Phonological processing skills are known as the most robust cognitive predictor of reading ability. Therefore, the neural determinants of phonological processing have been extensively investigated by means of either neurofunctional or neurostructural techniques. However, to fully understand how the brain represents and processes phonological information, there is need for studies that combine both methods. The present study applies such a multimodal approach with the aim of investigating the pre-reading relation between neural measures of auditory temporal processing, white matter properties of the reading network and phonological processing skills. We administered auditory steady-state responses, diffusion-weighted MRI scans and phonological awareness tasks in 59 pre-readers. Our results demonstrate that a stronger rightward lateralization of syllable-rate (4 Hz) processing coheres with higher fractional anisotropy in the left fronto-temporoparietal arcuate fasciculus. Both neural features each in turn relate to better phonological processing skills. As such, the current study provides novel evidence for the existence of a pre-reading relation between functional measures of syllable-rate processing, structural organization of the arcuate fasciculus and cognitive precursors of reading development. Moreover, our findings demonstrate the value of combining different neural techniques to gain insight in the underlying neural systems for reading (dis)ability.
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- 2020
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14. Investigating the Added Value of FreeSurfer’s Manual Editing Procedure for the Study of the Reading Network in a Pediatric Population
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Caroline Beelen, Thanh Vân Phan, Jan Wouters, Pol Ghesquière, and Maaike Vandermosten
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FreeSurfer ,manual editing ,automated processing ,pediatric T1-weighted images ,reading network ,developmental neuroimaging ,Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry ,RC321-571 - Abstract
Insights into brain anatomy are important for the early detection of neurodevelopmental disorders, such as dyslexia. FreeSurfer is one of the most frequently applied automatized software tools to study brain morphology. However, quality control of the outcomes provided by FreeSurfer is often ignored and could lead to wrong statistical inferences. Additional manual editing of the data may be a solution, although not without a cost in time and resources. Past research in adults on comparing the automatized method of FreeSurfer with and without additional manual editing indicated that although editing may lead to significant differences in morphological measures between the methods in some regions, it does not substantially change the sensitivity to detect clinical differences. Given that automated approaches are more likely to fail in pediatric—and inherently more noisy—data, we investigated in the current study whether FreeSurfer can be applied fully automatically or additional manual edits of T1-images are needed in a pediatric sample. Specifically, cortical thickness and surface area measures with and without additional manual edits were compared in six regions of interest (ROIs) of the reading network in 5-to-6-year-old children with and without dyslexia. Results revealed that additional editing leads to statistical differences in the morphological measures, but that these differences are consistent across subjects and that the sensitivity to reveal statistical differences in the morphological measures between children with and without dyslexia is not affected, even though conclusions of marginally significant findings can differ depending on the method used. Thereby, our results indicate that additional manual editing of reading-related regions in FreeSurfer has limited gain for pediatric samples.
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- 2020
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15. Subtraction by Addition Strategy Use in Children of Varying Mathematical Achievement Level: A Choice/No-Choice Study
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Joke Torbeyns, Greet Peters, Bert De Smedt, Pol Ghesquière, and Lieven Verschaffel
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subtraction by addition ,multi-digit subtraction ,strategy flexibility ,model of strategy change ,choice/no-choice method ,mathematical achievement level ,Psychology ,BF1-990 ,Mathematics ,QA1-939 - Abstract
We investigated the use of the subtraction by addition strategy, an important mental calculation strategy in children with different levels of mathematics achievement. In doing so we relied on Siegler’s cognitive psychological model of strategy change (Lemaire & Siegler, 1995), which defines strategy competencies in terms of four parameters (strategy repertoire, distribution, efficiency and selection), and the choice/no-choice method (Siegler & Lemaire, 1997), which is essentially characterized by offering items in two types of conditions (choice and no-choice). Participants were 63 11-12-year-olds with varied mathematics achievement levels. They solved multi-digit subtraction problems in the number domain up to 1,000 in one choice condition (choice between direct subtraction or subtraction by addition on each item) and two no-choice conditions (obligatory use of either direct subtraction or subtraction by addition on all items). We distinguished between two types of subtraction problems: problems with a small versus large difference between minuend and subtrahend. Although mathematics instruction only focused on applying direct subtraction, most children reported using subtraction by addition in the choice condition. Subtraction by addition was applied frequently and efficiently, particularly on small-difference problems. Children flexibly fitted their strategy choices to both numerical item characteristics and individual strategy speed characteristics. There were no differences in strategy use between the different mathematical achievement groups. These findings add to our theoretical understanding of children’s strategy acquisition and challenge current mathematics instruction practices that focus on direct subtraction for children of all levels of mathematics achievement.
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- 2018
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16. Early dynamics of white matter deficits in children developing dyslexia
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Jolijn Vanderauwera, Jan Wouters, Maaike Vandermosten, and Pol Ghesquière
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Neurophysiology and neuropsychology ,QP351-495 - Abstract
Neural anomalies have been demonstrated in dyslexia. Recent studies in pre-readers at risk for dyslexia and in pre-readers developing poor reading suggest that these anomalies might be a cause of their reading impairment. Our study goes one step further by exploring the neurodevelopmental trajectory of white matter anomalies in pre-readers with and without a familial risk for dyslexia (n = 61) of whom a strictly selected sample develops dyslexia later on (n = 15). We collected longitudinal diffusion MRI and behavioural data until grade 3. The results provide evidence that children with dyslexia exhibit pre-reading white matter anomalies in left and right long segment of the arcuate fasciculus (AF), with predictive power of the left segment above traditional cognitive measures and familial risk. Whereas white matter differences in the left AF seem most strongly related to the development of dyslexia, differences in the left IFOF and in the right AF seem driven by both familial risk and later reading ability. Moreover, differences in the left AF appeared to be dynamic. This study supports and expands recent insights into the neural basis of dyslexia, pointing towards pre-reading anomalies related to dyslexia, as well as underpinning the dynamic character of white matter. Keywords: Developmental dyslexia, Reading, White matter, DTI, Arcuate fasciculus, IFOF
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- 2017
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17. Grapheme-Phoneme Learning in an Unknown Orthography: A Study in Typical Reading and Dyslexic Children
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Jeremy M. Law, Astrid De Vos, Jolijn Vanderauwera, Jan Wouters, Pol Ghesquière, and Maaike Vandermosten
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dyslexia ,literacy ,phonological awareness ,orthographic knowledge ,letter-speech sound learning ,grapheme-phoneme-correspondences ,Psychology ,BF1-990 - Abstract
In this study, we examined the learning of new grapheme-phoneme correspondences in individuals with and without dyslexia. Additionally, we investigated the relation between grapheme-phoneme learning and measures of phonological awareness, orthographic knowledge and rapid automatized naming, with a focus on the unique joint variance of grapheme-phoneme learning to word and non-word reading achievement. Training of grapheme-phoneme associations consisted of a 20-min training program in which eight novel letters (Hebrew) needed to be paired with speech sounds taken from the participant's native language (Dutch). Eighty-four third grade students, of whom 20 were diagnosed with dyslexia, participated in the training and testing. Our results indicate a reduced ability of dyslexic readers in applying newly learned grapheme-phoneme correspondences while reading words which consist of these novel letters. However, we did not observe a significant independent contribution of grapheme-phoneme learning to reading outcomes. Alternatively, results from the regression analysis indicate that failure to read may be due to differences in phonological and/or orthographic knowledge but not to differences in the grapheme-phoneme-conversion process itself.
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- 2018
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18. A DTI tractography study in pre-readers at risk for dyslexia
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Maaike Vandermosten, Jolijn Vanderauwera, Catherine Theys, Astrid De Vos, Sophie Vanvooren, Stefan Sunaert, Jan Wouters, and Pol Ghesquière
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Dyslexia ,Preschool children ,Reading network ,Diffusion weighted imaging ,Developmental neuroscience ,Neurophysiology and neuropsychology ,QP351-495 - Abstract
In adults and school-aged children, phonological aspects of reading seem to be sustained by left dorsal regions, while ventral regions seem to be involved in orthographic word recognition. Yet, given that the brain reorganises during reading acquisition, it is unknown when and how these reading routes emerge and whether neural deficits in dyslexia predate reading onset. Using diffusion MRI in 36 pre-readers with a family risk for dyslexia (FRD+) and 35 well matched pre-readers without a family risk (FRD−), our results show that phonological predictors of reading are sustained bilaterally by both ventral and dorsal tracts. This suggests that a dorsal and left-hemispheric specialisation for phonological aspects of reading, as observed in adults, is presumably gradually formed throughout reading development. Second, our results indicate that FRD+ pre-readers display mainly white matter differences in left ventral tracts. This suggests that atypical white matter organisation previously found in dyslexic adults may be causal rather than resulting from a lifetime of reading difficulties, and that the location of such a deficit may vary throughout development. While this study forms an important starting point, longitudinal follow-up of these children will allow further investigation of the dynamics between emerging literacy development and white matter connections.
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- 2015
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19. ACADEMIC PERFORMANCE OF PERUVIAN ELEMENTARY SCHOOL CHILDREN: THE CASE OF SCHOOLS IN LIMA AT THE 6TH GRADE
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DENISSE L. MANRIQUE MILLONES, KARLA VAN LEEUWEN, and POL GHESQUIÈRE
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Psychology ,BF1-990 - Abstract
El estudio que se informa examinó de qué manera el rendimiento académico en diversas áreas del aprendizaje tales como ortografía, lectura y aritmética estuvo asociado con diferentes variables relacionadas con niños (por ejemplo: género, inteligencia y edad). Asimismo, se consideraron algunas variables distales como estatus socioeconómico y tipo de colegio. En el estudio participaron 1.129 niños que cursaban 6to grado de educación primaria en Lima Metropolitana (Perú). Los estudiantes com pletaron cuatro pruebas: En el área de lectura fueron examinados con un subtest de la prueba Procesos Lectores (PROLEC-SE) Lectura de Palabras y Pseudo - palabras (Cuetos & Ramos, 1999). En el área de Aritmética fueron evaluados con el Subtest de Facilidad Numérica de Ekstrom, French y Harman (1979) y en el caso de Ortografía se aplicó la Prueba de Rendimiento Ortográfico (Dioses, 2001). La variable inteligencia fue medida con la Prueba de Matrices Progresivas de Raven (Raven, J., Raven, J.C. & Court, 2004). Debido a la estructura jerárquica de los datos (estudiantes dentro de clases y clases dentro de escuelas) se aplicó análisis multinivel para cada variable académica (ortografía, lectura y aritmética). Los resultados revelaron un gran impacto en primer lugar del tipo de escuela: los alumnos de escuelas privadas rindieron mejor que los de escuelas públicas en todas las áreas académicas; en segundo lugar, la variable inteligencia juega un rol esencial, cuanto mayor es el coeficiente intelectual del estudiante, mejor es el rendimiento académico, y parcialmente del género; las niñas mostraron un mejor desempeño en comparación con los niños en el área de ortografía. Se discuten en detalle algunas repercusiones pedagógicas.
- Published
- 2011
20. Symbolic Numerical Magnitude Processing Is as Important to Arithmetic as Phonological Awareness Is to Reading.
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Kiran Vanbinst, Daniel Ansari, Pol Ghesquière, and Bert De Smedt
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
In this article, we tested, using a 1-year longitudinal design, whether symbolic numerical magnitude processing or children's numerical representation of Arabic digits, is as important to arithmetic as phonological awareness is to reading. Children completed measures of symbolic comparison, phonological awareness, arithmetic, reading at the start of third grade and the latter two were retested at the start of fourth grade. Cross-sectional and longitudinal correlations indicated that symbolic comparison was a powerful domain-specific predictor of arithmetic and that phonological awareness was a unique predictor of reading. Crucially, the strength of these independent associations was not significantly different. This indicates that symbolic numerical magnitude processing is as important to arithmetic development as phonological awareness is to reading and suggests that symbolic numerical magnitude processing is a good candidate for screening children at risk for developing mathematical difficulties.
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- 2016
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21. Direct and indirect relationships between parental personality and externalising behaviour: The role of negative parenting
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Peter Prinzie, Patrick Onghena, Walter Hellinckx, Hans Grietens, Pol Ghesquière, and Hilde Colpin
- Subjects
Psychology ,BF1-990 - Abstract
Although the impact of parent characteristics and parenting practices on the development of behavioural problems in childhood is often recognised, only a few research programmes have assessed the unique contributions of negative parenting as well as the parent personality characteristics in the same study. Using the Five Factor Model, we examined the extent to which mothers' and father's personality characteristics were related to parenting and children's externalising behaviour in a proportional stratified sample of 599 nonclinical elementary school-aged children. Path analysis indicated that negative parenting practices and parents personality characteristics operate together to predict children's externalising problem behaviour. Consistent with past research (Patterson & Dishion, 1988; Patterson, Reid, & Dishion, 1992), parent personality traits were indirectly related to children's externalising problem behaviour. Their effect was mediated by negative parenting practices. But in addition and in contrast to Patterson's theoretical model, parent personality traits also contributed directly to children's externalising problem behaviour. For the mother data, as well as for the father data, the personality dimensions Emotional Stability and Conscientiousness were negatively and Autonomy was positively related to children's externalising problem behaviours.
- Published
- 2005
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22. Diffusion tensor imaging and resting-state functional MRI-scanning in 5- and 6-year-old children: training protocol and motion assessment.
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Catherine Theys, Jan Wouters, and Pol Ghesquière
- Subjects
Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Advanced Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) techniques such as Diffusion Tensor Imaging (DTI) and resting-state functional MRI (rfMRI) are widely used to study structural and functional neural connectivity. However, as these techniques are highly sensitive to motion artifacts and require a considerable amount of time for image acquisition, successful acquisition of these images can be challenging to complete with certain populations. This is especially true for young children. This paper describes a new approach termed the 'submarine protocol', designed to prepare 5- and 6-year-old children for advanced MRI scanning. The submarine protocol aims to ensure that successful scans can be acquired in a time- and resource-efficient manner, without the need for sedation. This manuscript outlines the protocol and details its outcomes, as measured through the number of children who completed the scanning procedure and analysis of the degree of motion present in the acquired images. Seventy-six children aged between 5.8 and 6.9 years were trained using the submarine protocol and subsequently underwent DTI and rfMRI scanning. After completing the submarine protocol, 75 of the 76 children (99%) completed their DTI-scan and 72 children (95%) completed the full 35-minute scan session. Results of diffusion data, acquired in 75 children, showed that the motion in 60 of the scans (80%) did not exceed the threshold for excessive motion. In the rfMRI scans, this was the case for 62 of the 71 scans (87%). When placed in the context of previous studies, the motion data of the 5- and 6-year-old children reported here were as good as, or better than those previously reported for groups of older children (i.e., 8-year-olds). Overall, this study shows that the submarine protocol can be used successfully to acquire DTI and rfMRI scans in 5 and 6-year-old children, without the need for sedation or lengthy training procedures.
- Published
- 2014
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23. Children's mapping between non-symbolic and symbolic numerical magnitudes and its association with timed and untimed tests of mathematics achievement.
- Author
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Carmen Brankaer, Pol Ghesquière, and Bert De Smedt
- Subjects
Medicine ,Science - Abstract
The ability to map between non-symbolic numerical magnitudes and Arabic numerals has been put forward as a key factor in children's mathematical development. This mapping ability has been mainly examined indirectly by looking at children's performance on a symbolic magnitude comparison task. The present study investigated mapping in a more direct way by using a task in which children had to choose which of two choice quantities (Arabic digits or dot arrays) matched the target quantity (dot array or Arabic digit), thereby focusing on small quantities ranging from 1 to 9. We aimed to determine the development of mapping over time and its relation to mathematics achievement. Participants were 36 first graders (M = 6 years 8 months) and 46 third graders (M = 8 years 8 months) who all completed mapping tasks, symbolic and non-symbolic magnitude comparison tasks and standardized timed and untimed tests of mathematics achievement. Findings revealed that children are able to map between non-symbolic and symbolic representations and that this mapping ability develops over time. Moreover, we found that children's mapping ability is related to timed and untimed measures of mathematics achievement, over and above the variance accounted for by their numerical magnitude comparison skills.
- Published
- 2014
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24. Stimulating preschoolers' early literacy development using educational technology: A systematic literature review.
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Genica Fae Bautista, Pol Ghesquière, and Joke Torbeyns
- Published
- 2024
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25. Karaton: An Example of AI Integration Within a Literacy App.
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Hannes Hauwaert, Pol Ghesquière, Jacqueline Tordoir, and Jenny M. Thomson
- Published
- 2020
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26. Design and characterization of antenna arrays in eWLB package for 61 GHz radar applications.
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Martin Frank, Pol Ghesquière, Stefan Kiefl, Robert Weigel, and Alexander Koelpin
- Published
- 2018
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27. Dynamics of cognitive predictors during reading acquisition in a sample of children overrepresented for dyslexia risk
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Lauren Blockmans, Rogier Kievit, Jan Wouters, Pol Ghesquière, and Maaike Vandermosten
- Subjects
Cognitive Neuroscience ,Developmental and Educational Psychology - Published
- 2023
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28. Bendable energy-harvesting module with organic photovoltaic, rechargeable battery, and a-IGZO TFT charging electronics.
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Tilo Meister, Koichi Ishida, Reza Shabanpour, Bahman Kheradmand Boroujeni, Corrado Carta, Frank Ellinger, Niko Münzenrieder, Luisa Petti, Giovanni A. Salvatore, Gerhard Tröster, Michael Wagner 0021, Pol Ghesquière, Stefan Kiefl, and Martin Krebs
- Published
- 2015
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29. Game-based Assessment of Psycho-acoustic Thresholds: Not All Games Are Equal!
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Vero Vanden Abeele, Jan Wouters, Pol Ghesquière, Ann Goeleven, and Luc Geurts
- Published
- 2015
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30. Neural synchronization and intervention in pre-readers who later on develop dyslexia
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Shauni Van Herck, Maria Economou, Femke Vanden Bempt, Toivo Glatz, Pol Ghesquière, Maaike Vandermosten, and Jan Wouters
- Subjects
PERCEPTION ,Science & Technology ,ONSET ENHANCEMENT ,General Neuroscience ,phonics-based training ,Neurosciences ,auditory temporal processing ,reading development ,CHILDREN ,Auditory Steady-State Response ,ADULTS ,SPEECH ENVELOPE MODULATIONS ,speech envelope enhancement ,RISE-TIME ,OSCILLATIONS ,AMPLITUDE-MODULATION ,INTELLIGIBILITY ,Neurosciences & Neurology ,SENSITIVITY ,Life Sciences & Biomedicine - Abstract
A growing number of studies has investigated temporal processing deficits in dyslexia. These studies largely focus on neural synchronization to speech. However, the importance of rise times for neural synchronization is often overlooked. Furthermore, targeted interventions, phonics-based and auditory, are being developed, but little is known about their impact. The current study investigated the impact of a 12-week tablet-based intervention. Children at risk for dyslexia received phonics-based training, either with (n = 31) or without (n = 31) auditory training, or engaged in active control training (n = 29). Additionally, neural synchronization and processing of rise times was longitudinally investigated in children with dyslexia (n = 26) and typical readers (n = 52) from pre-reading (5 years) to beginning reading age (7 years). The three time points in the longitudinal study correspond to intervention pre-test, post-test and consolidation, approximately 1 year after completing the intervention. At each time point neural synchronization was measured to sinusoidal stimuli and pulsatile stimuli with shortened rise times at syllable (4 Hz) and phoneme rates (20 Hz). Our results revealed no impact on neural synchronization at syllable and phoneme rate of the phonics-based and auditory training. However, we did reveal atypical hemispheric specialization at both syllable and phoneme rates in children with dyslexia. This was detected even before the onset of reading acquisition, pointing towards a possible causal rather than consequential mechanism in dyslexia. This study contributes to our understanding of the temporal processing deficits underlying the development of dyslexia, but also shows that the development of targeted interventions is still a work in progress. ispartof: EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE vol:57 issue:3 pages:547-567 ispartof: location:France status: published
- Published
- 2023
31. A Fully-Printed Self-Biased Polymeric Audio Amplifier for Driving Fully-Printed Piezoelectric Loudspeakers.
- Author
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Bahman Kheradmand Boroujeni, Georg Cornelius Schmidt, Daniel Höft, Maxi Bellmann, Katherina Haase, Koichi Ishida, Reza Shabanpour, Tilo Meister, Corrado Carta, Pol Ghesquière, Arved C. Hübler, and Frank Ellinger
- Published
- 2016
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32. Estonian words in noise test for children (EWINc).
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Anneli Veispak, Sofie Jansen, Pol Ghesquière, and Jan Wouters
- Published
- 2016
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33. Translating preschoolers' game experiences into design guidelines via a laddering study.
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Véronique Celis, Jelle Husson, Vero Vanden Abeele, Leen Loyez, Lieven Van den Audenaeren, Pol Ghesquière, Ann Goeleven, Jan Wouters, and Luc Geurts
- Published
- 2013
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34. DYSL-X: Design of a tablet game for early risk detection of dyslexia in preschoolers.
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Lieven Van den Audenaeren, Véronique Celis, Vero Vanden Abeele, Luc Geurts, Jelle Husson, Pol Ghesquière, Jan Wouters, Leen Loyez, and Ann Goeleven
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
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35. Atypical processing in neural source analysis of speech envelope modulations in adolescents with dyslexia
- Author
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Raúl Granados Barbero, Pol Ghesquière, Astrid De Vos, and Wouters Jan
- Subjects
Auditory Cortex ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Speech perception ,Adolescent ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,General Neuroscience ,Dyslexia ,Brain ,Alpha (ethology) ,Electroencephalography ,Audiology ,medicine.disease ,Speech processing ,Auditory cortex ,Entrainment (biomusicology) ,Acoustic Stimulation ,Speech Perception ,medicine ,Humans ,Speech ,Syllable ,Psychology - Abstract
Different studies have suggested that language and developmental disorders such as dyslexia are associated with a disturbance of auditory entrainment and of the functional hemispheric asymmetries during speech processing. These disorders typically result from an issue in the phonological component of language that causes problems to represent and manipulate the phonological structure of words at the syllable and/or phoneme level. We used Auditory Steady-State Responses (ASSRs) in EEG recordings to investigate the brain activation and hemisphere asymmetry of theta, alpha, beta and low-gamma range oscillations in typical readers and readers with dyslexia. The aim was to analyse whether the group differences found in previous electrode level studies were caused by a different source activation pattern or conversely was an effect that could be found on the active brain sources. We could not find differences in the brain locations of the main active brain sources. However, we observed differences in the extracted waveforms. The group average of the first DSS component of all signal-to-noise ratios of ASSR at source level were higher than the group averages at the electrode level. These analyses included a lower alpha synchronisation in adolescents with dyslexia and the possibility of compensatory mechanisms in theta, beta and low-gamma frequency bands. The main brain auditory sources were located in cortical regions around the auditory cortex. Thus, the differences observed in auditory EEG experiments would, according to our findings, have their origin in the intrinsic oscillatory mechanisms of the brain cortical sources related to speech perception.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Author response for 'Neural synchronization and intervention in pre‐readers who later on develop dyslexia'
- Author
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null Shauni Van Herck, null Maria Economou, null Femke Vanden Bempt, null Toivo Glatz, null Pol Ghesquière, null Maaike Vandermosten, and null Jan Wouters
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. The Use of ICT to Support Students with Dyslexia.
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Nadia Diraä, Jan Engelen, Pol Ghesquière, and Koen Neyens
- Published
- 2009
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38. Automatic assessment of children's reading level.
- Author
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Jacques Duchateau, Leen Cleuren, Hugo Van hamme, and Pol Ghesquière
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
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39. Structural brain dynamics across reading development: A longitudinal MRI study from kindergarten to grade 5
- Author
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Maaike Vandermosten, Pol Ghesquière, Diana M. Sima, Dirk Smeets, Thanh Van Phan, and Jan Wouters
- Subjects
Male ,CHILDHOOD ,Primary education ,LANGUAGE ,CHILDREN ,Developmental psychology ,primary school ,Dyslexia ,Child Development ,Reading (process) ,Longitudinal Studies ,Child ,Research Articles ,media_common ,Cerebral Cortex ,Radiological and Ultrasound Technology ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine & Medical Imaging ,Head growth ,Early reading ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Neurology ,Dynamics (music) ,Child, Preschool ,Anatomy ,Psychology ,Life Sciences & Biomedicine ,WHITE-MATTER ,Research Article ,MRI ,longitudinal ,media_common.quotation_subject ,brain ,Neuroimaging ,Gray (unit) ,reading ,dyslexia ,GENERAL FRAMEWORK ,medicine ,Humans ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,cortical development ,childhood ,Science & Technology ,Neurosciences ,medicine.disease ,Academic skills ,Reading ,VOLUME ,Neurosciences & Neurology ,Neurology (clinical) ,Nerve Net - Abstract
Primary education is the incubator for learning academic skills that help children to become a literate, communicative, and independent person. Over this learning period, nonlinear and regional changes in the brain occur, but how these changes relate to academic performance, such as reading ability, is still unclear. In the current study, we analyzed longitudinal T1 MRI data of 41 children in order to investigate typical cortical development during the early reading stage (end of kindergarten–end of grade 2) and advanced reading stage (end of grade 2–middle of grade 5), and to detect putative deviant trajectories in children with dyslexia. The structural brain change was quantified with a reliable measure that directly calculates the local morphological differences between brain images of two time points, while considering the global head growth. When applying this measure to investigate typical cortical development, we observed that left temporal and temporoparietal regions belonging to the reading network exhibited an increase during the early reading stage and stabilized during the advanced reading stage. This suggests that the natural plasticity window for reading is within the first years of primary school, hence earlier than the typical period for reading intervention. Concerning neurotrajectories in children with dyslexia compared to typical readers, we observed no differences in gray matter development of the left reading network, but we found different neurotrajectories in right IFG opercularis (during the early reading stage) and in right isthmus cingulate (during the advanced reading stage), which could reflect compensatory neural mechanisms., In this three‐time point longitudinal MRI study, we show that during the first 2 years of primary school gray matter regions of the reading network seem to mature while stabilizing during the later grades of primary school. Children with dyslexia show a deviant cortical development in regions outside of the reading network.
- Published
- 2021
40. Effects of a Parental Involvement Intervention to Promote Child Literacy in Tanzania: A Cluster Randomized Controlled Trial
- Author
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Nestory Ligembe, Wim Van Den Noortgate, Mary Wilfred Ogondiek, Karla Van Leeuwen, Janeth Kigobe, and Pol Ghesquière
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,biology ,media_common.quotation_subject ,education ,05 social sciences ,050301 education ,biology.organism_classification ,Disease cluster ,Literacy ,Education ,law.invention ,Tanzania ,Randomized controlled trial ,law ,Reading (process) ,Intervention (counseling) ,Family medicine ,0502 economics and business ,Parent training ,medicine ,050207 economics ,Psychology ,0503 education ,media_common - Abstract
This study reports on the effects of a 1-year parental involvement intervention on reading development of primary school children. The intervention included a teacher and parent training, focusing on teacher-parent communication and parental involvement in homework and reading at home. We used a cluster randomized controlled trial design with pre-, post- and follow-up measurements to evaluate the intervention. Participants were 600 second grade children (n ¼ 264 in the intervention group, n ¼ 336 in the control group), with their parents and teachers from 24 schools in Dar Es Salaam, Tanzania. A hierarchical linear model, which assessed children’s reading growth across three time points, demonstrated that compared to children in the control condition, children in the intervention condition made significantly more progress in decoding skills, reading fluency and reading comprehension from pre- to post-intervention, and from pre-intervention to follow-up (8–9 months after the intervention). We discuss the usefulness of this intervention in helping children who are at risk for reading problems in primary school. ispartof: Journal Of Research On Educational Effectiveness vol:14 issue:4 pages:1-22 status: Published online
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Left fronto-parietal white matter correlates with individual differences in children's ability to solve additions and multiplications: A tractography study.
- Author
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Leen Van Beek, Pol Ghesquière, Lieven Lagae, and Bert De Smedt
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. A Bridge over Troubled Listening: Improving Speech-in-Noise Perception by Children with Dyslexia
- Author
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Jan Wouters, Tilde Van Hirtum, and Pol Ghesquière
- Subjects
Male ,Speech perception ,media_common.quotation_subject ,01 natural sciences ,Speech Acoustics ,Dyslexia ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Phonological awareness ,Reading (process) ,Perception ,0103 physical sciences ,medicine ,Learning to read ,Humans ,Speech ,Active listening ,Child ,010301 acoustics ,media_common ,Speech technology ,medicine.disease ,Sensory Systems ,Otorhinolaryngology ,Speech Perception ,Female ,Noise ,Psychology ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Research Article ,Cognitive psychology - Abstract
Developmental dyslexia is most commonly associated with phonological processing difficulties. However, children with dyslexia may experience poor speech-in-noise perception as well. Although there is an ongoing debate whether a speech perception deficit is inherent to dyslexia or acts as an aggravating risk factor compromising learning to read indirectly, improving speech perception might boost reading-related skills and reading acquisition. In the current study, we evaluated advanced speech technology as applied in auditory prostheses, to promote and eventually normalize speech perception of school-aged children with dyslexia, i.e., envelope enhancement (EE). The EE strategy automatically detects and emphasizes onset cues and consequently reinforces the temporal structure of the speech envelope. Our results confirmed speech-in-noise perception difficulties by children with dyslexia. However, we found that exaggerating temporal "landmarks" of the speech envelope (i.e., amplitude rise time and modulations)-by using EE-passively and instantaneously improved speech perception in noise for children with dyslexia. Moreover, the benefit derived from EE was large enough to completely bridge the initial gap between children with dyslexia and their typical reading peers. Taken together, the beneficial outcome of EE suggests an important contribution of the temporal structure of the envelope to speech perception in noise difficulties in dyslexia, providing an interesting foundation for future intervention studies based on auditory and speech rhythm training.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Morphological processing in children with developmental dyslexia: a visual masked priming study
- Author
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Jeremy Law and Pol Ghesquière
- Subjects
AWARENESS ,Morphological processing ,medicine.medical_specialty ,media_common.quotation_subject ,INSTRUCTION ,Social Sciences ,Audiology ,behavioral disciplines and activities ,Education ,DERIVATIONAL MORPHOLOGY ,LITERACY ACHIEVEMENT ,Phonological awareness ,Reading (process) ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,medicine ,Lexical decision task ,Psychology ,Association (psychology) ,media_common ,Psychology, Educational ,Dyslexia ,Cognition ,ADULTS ,medicine.disease ,Education & Educational Research ,ABILITY ,INSIGHTS ,WORD RECOGNITION ,UNIVERSITY-STUDENTS ,Priming (psychology) ,FORM - Abstract
This study examined the processing of derivational morphology and its association with early phonological skills of 24 Dutch-speaking children with dyslexia and 46 controls matched for age. A masked priming experiment was conducted where the semantic overlap between morphologically related pairs was manipulated as part of a lexical decision task. Results suggest that morphological processing is intact in children with dyslexia when compared to age-matched controls. Significant priming effects were found in each group. Children with dyslexia were found to solely benefit from the morpho-semantic information, while the morpho-orthographic form the properties of morphemes-influenced controls. Due to the longitudinal nature of the data set, an examination of early phonological awareness’s role in the later development of morphological processing skills was possible. In line with the psycholinguistic grain-size theory, fifth-grade morphological processing in children with dyslexia was found to be negatively correlated to earlier second-grade PA skills. A similar relation was not found among the controls. Results indicate a potential shift in the cognitive processes involved during reading to compensate for the observed phonological deficits of children with dyslexia.
- Published
- 2022
44. 3.5mW 1MHz AM detector and digitally-controlled tuner in a-IGZO TFT for wireless communications in a fully integrated flexible system for audio bag.
- Author
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Tilo Meister, Koichi Ishida, Corrado Carta, Reza Shabanpour, Bahman Kheradmand Boroujeni, Niko Münzenrieder, Luisa Petti, Giovanni A. Salvatore, G. Schmidt, Pol Ghesquière, Stefan Kiefl, G. De Toma, T. Faetti, Arved C. Hübler, Gerhard Tröster, and Frank Ellinger
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Developing a reading tutor: Design and evaluation of dedicated speech recognition and synthesis modules.
- Author
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Jacques Duchateau, Yuk On Kong, Leen Cleuren, Lukas Latacz, Jan Roelens, Abdurrahman Samir, Kris Demuynck, Pol Ghesquière, Werner Verhelst, and Hugo Van hamme
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Cross-domain associations of key cognitive correlates of early reading and early arithmetic in 5-year-olds
- Author
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Bert De Smedt, Pol Ghesquière, Elsje van Bergen, Kiran Vanbinst, LEARN! - Educational neuroscience, learning and development, and Biological Psychology
- Subjects
Sociology and Political Science ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Primary education ,Multiple deficit model ,Education ,Numeral system ,Early reading ,Phonological awareness ,Reading (process) ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,medicine ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Arithmetic ,media_common ,05 social sciences ,Dyslexia ,050301 education ,Contrast (statistics) ,Cognition ,Number sense ,Shared cognitive correlates ,medicine.disease ,Early arithmetic ,Psychology ,0503 education ,SDG 4 - Quality Education ,050104 developmental & child psychology - Abstract
Disabilities in reading and arithmetic often co-occur, but (dis)abilities in reading and arithmetic have mostly been studied in isolation from each other. This study explicitly focused on the co-development of early reading and early arithmetic before primary education. The Multiple Deficit Model was used as theoretical framework (Pennington, 2006). According to this model, the overlap between early reading and early arithmetic is due to a constellation of shared and unique cognitive correlates. Therefore, we investigated whether key cognitive correlates of one academic ability also correlate with the other. Participants were 188 five-year-old kindergartners who had not yet been formally instructed in reading and arithmetic. Phonological awareness was selected as reading-specific cognitive correlate and (non)symbolic numerical magnitude processing and numeral recognition were considered as arithmetic-specific cognitive correlates. We administered a productive letter knowledge task as a proxy of early reading. Early arithmetic was assessed with simple problems such as 2 + 3 =? . Regression analyses and Bayesian hypothesis testing revealed significant correlations between early reading and early arithmetic before children start primary education. Phonological awareness predicted not only early reading but also, early arithmetic, even when controlling for early reading and arithmetic-specific cognitive correlates. Likewise, numeral recognition predicted not only early arithmetic, but also early reading, even when controlling for early arithmetic and phonological awareness. Phonological awareness and numeral recognition can be considered shared cognitive correlates of both academic domains. In contrast, non-symbolic and symbolic numerical magnitude processing skills were specifically correlated to early arithmetic, and not to early reading, indicating that they are unique to only one academic domain. In line with the Multiple Deficit Model, our data suggest that early reading and early arithmetic have a shared as well as unique underlying cognitive basis. Further unravelling what these academic abilities have in common can be of high value for detecting children at risk already before their transition to formal primary education. ispartof: Early Childhood Research Quarterly vol:51 pages:144-152 status: published
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Myelin water fraction in relation to fractional anisotropy and reading in 10-year-old children
- Author
-
Maria Economou, Thibo Billiet, Jan Wouters, Pol Ghesquière, Jolijn Vanderauwera, Maaike Vandermosten, UCL - SSH/IPSY - Psychological Sciences Research Institute, and UCL - SSS/IONS - Institute of NeuroScience
- Subjects
Histology ,Reading ,General Neuroscience ,Anisotropy ,Brain ,Humans ,Water ,Anatomy ,Child ,White Matter ,Myelin Sheath - Abstract
Diffusion-weighted imaging studies have repeatedly shown that white matter correlates with reading throughout development. However, the neurobiological interpretation of this relationship is constrained by the limited microstructural specificity of diffusion imaging. A critical component of white matter microstructure is myelin, which can be investigated noninvasively using MRI. Here, we examined the link between myelin water fraction (MWF) and reading ability in 10-year-old children (n = 69). To better understand this relationship, we additionally investigated how these two variables relate to fractional anisotropy (FA; a common index of diffusion-weighted imaging). Our analysis revealed that lower MWF coheres with better reading scores in left-hemispheric tracts relevant for reading. While we replicated previous reports on a positive relationship between FA and MWF, we did not find any evidence for an association between reading and FA. Together, these findings contrast previous research suggesting that poor reading abilities might be rooted in lower myelination and emphasize the need for further longitudinal research to understand how this relationship evolves throughout reading development. Altogether, this study contributes important insights into the role of myelin-related processes in the relationship between reading and white matter structure.
- Published
- 2021
48. Feasibility, Enjoyment, and Language Comprehension Impact of a Tablet- and GameFlow-Based Story-Listening Game for Kindergarteners: Methodological and Mixed Methods Study (Preprint)
- Author
-
Femke Vanden Bempt, Maria Economou, Ward Dehairs, Maaike Vandermosten, Jan Wouters, Pol Ghesquière, and Jolijn Vanderauwera
- Abstract
BACKGROUND Enjoyment plays a key role in the success and feasibility of serious gaming interventions. Unenjoyable games will not be played, and in the case of serious gaming, learning will not occur. Therefore, a so-called GameFlow model has been developed, which intends to guide (serious) game developers in the process of creating and evaluating enjoyment in digital (serious) games. Regarding language learning, a variety of serious games targeting specific language components exist in the market, albeit often without available assessments of enjoyment or feasibility. OBJECTIVE This study evaluates the enjoyment and feasibility of a tablet-based, serious story-listening game for kindergarteners, developed based on the principles of the GameFlow model. This study also preliminarily explores the possibility of using the game to foster language comprehension. METHODS Within the framework of a broader preventive reading intervention, 91 kindergarteners aged 5 years with a cognitive risk for dyslexia were asked to play the story game for 12 weeks, 6 days per week, either combined with a tablet-based phonics intervention or control games. The story game involved listening to and rating stories and responding to content-related questions. Game enjoyment was assessed through postintervention questionnaires, a GameFlow-based evaluation, and in-game story rating data. Feasibility was determined based on in-game general question response accuracy (QRA), reflecting the difficulty level, attrition rate, and final game exposure and training duration. Moreover, to investigate whether game enjoyment and difficulty influenced feasibility, final game exposure and training duration were predicted based on the in-game initial story ratings and initial QRA. Possible growth in language comprehension was explored by analyzing in-game QRA as a function of the game phase and baseline language skills. RESULTS Eventually, data from 82 participants were analyzed. The questionnaire and in-game data suggested an overall enjoyable game experience. However, the GameFlow-based evaluation implied room for game design improvement. The general QRA confirmed a well-adapted level of difficulty for the target sample. Moreover, despite the overall attrition rate of 39% (32/82), 90% (74/82) of the participants still completed 80% of the game, albeit with a large variation in training days. Higher initial QRA significantly increased game exposure (β=.35; Pβ=−0.16; P=.003). In-game QRA was positively predicted by game phase (β=1.44; P=.004), baseline listening comprehension (β=1.56; P=.002), and vocabulary (β=.16; P=.01), with larger QRA growth over game phases in children with lower baseline listening comprehension skills (β=−0.08; P=.04). CONCLUSIONS Generally, the story game seemed enjoyable and feasible. However, the GameFlow model evaluation and predictive relationships imply room for further game design improvements. Furthermore, our results cautiously suggest the potential of the game to foster language comprehension; however, future randomized controlled trials should further elucidate the impact on language comprehension.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Author response for 'Atypical processing in neural source analysis of speech envelope modulations in adolescents with dyslexia'
- Author
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Raúl Granados Barbero, Astrid De Vos, Pol Ghesquière, and Jan Wouters
- Subjects
Computer science ,Speech recognition ,Dyslexia ,medicine ,medicine.disease ,Envelope (waves) - Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Children's Oral Reading Corpus (CHOREC): Description and Assessment of Annotator Agreement.
- Author
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Leen Cleuren, Jacques Duchateau, Pol Ghesquière, and Hugo Van hamme
- Published
- 2008
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