grant

Evaluating the Impact of Non-Invasive Brain Stimulation on Learning and Consolidation of Phonologically Similar Novel Spoken Words

Organization GEORGIA STATE UNIVERSITYLocation ATLANTA, UNITED STATESPosted 20 Dec 2023Deadline 30 Nov 2026
NIHUS FederalResearch GrantFY20250-11 years oldAddressAgeBehavior Conditioning TherapyBehavior ModificationBehavior TherapyBehavior TreatmentBehavioralBehavioral Conditioning TherapyBehavioral ModificationBehavioral TherapyBehavioral TreatmentBrainBrain Nervous SystemChildChild YouthChildren (0-21)ChronicCognitive DiscriminationConditioning TherapyDevelopmentDisabilities experienceDiscriminationEducationEducational aspectsEncephalonFoundationsFunctional MRIFunctional Magnetic Resonance ImagingFutureGeneralized GrowthGrowthImpairmentIndividualIndividual DifferencesLanguageLanguage DevelopmentLearningLearning DifficultyLeftMR ImagingMR TomographyMRIMRIsMagnetic Resonance ImagingMeasuresMedical Imaging, Magnetic Resonance / Nuclear Magnetic ResonanceMethodologyModelingNMR ImagingNMR TomographyNatureNeurobiologyNoiseNuclear Magnetic Resonance ImagingParticipantPopulationProcessReaction TimeReaderReadingReading DisabilitiesReading disabilityReportingResearchResponse RTResponse TimeRiskRoleStructure of supramarginal gyrusSupramarginal GyrusSystemTechniquesTestingTissue GrowthTranslatingUnemploymentUnited StatesVisualWord ProcessingWorkYouthYouth 10-21Zeugmatographyacquiring language skillsagesbehavior interventionbehavioral interventionbrain basedcausal diagramcausal modeldesigndesigningdevelopmentaldiscrimination taskdorsal pathwaydorsal processing streamdorsal streamdorsal visual pathwaydorsal visual processing streamdorsal visual streamfMRIimprovedindexingjoblessjoblessnesskidslanguage acquisitionlanguage learninglearned behaviorlearning behaviorliteracyneuralneural controlneural mechanismneural regulationneurobiologicalneuromechanismneuromodulationneuromodulatoryneuroregulationnon-invasive brain stimulationnovelontogenyout of workpeerphonologypoor health outcomepsychomotor reaction timereading abilityreading achievementreading competencereading deficiencyreading deficitreading difficultiesreading proficiencyreduced health outcomerepetitive transcranial magnetic stimulationskillssocial rolesoundunemployedword learningworse health outcomeyoungsteryouth age
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Full Description

PROJECT SUMMARY/ABSTRACT
In the United States, nearly one in five older youth struggles with basic reading skills (NCES; PIAAC, 2019).

Because of their low literacy levels, these individuals are placed at greater risk for unemployment and poor health

outcomes compared to their typically developing peers (Miller, McCardle, & Hernandez, 2010). These struggles

with reading may be due to a brain-based difficulty in learning new words, which is a critical skill for reading and

language development (Perfetti, 2007). We have previously reported behavioral evidence that children and youth

with reading disabilities experience difficulties learning and remembering phonologically similar spoken

pseudowords (e.g., pibu in relation to pibo or dibu; Malins et al., 2020), which can be taken as evidence of

unstable phonological representations for newly learned words (Magnuson et al., 2011). Despite these previous

behavioral findings, we do not yet understand how language-related networks in the brain contribute to these

observed word learning difficulties, especially in older youth who have struggled with reading for many years.

The objective of this proposal is to use non-invasive brain stimulation (i.e., repetitive transcranial magnetic

stimulation, or rTMS) to evaluate a causal model of word learning and processing, thereby providing a better

understanding of its underlying neural mechanisms. In the proposed study, using a within-subjects design,

participants will complete a visual phonological discrimination task and spoken artificial lexicon learning and, as

well as a novel word retention task following application of rTMS (either active stimulation or sham) to a dorsal

stream node of the reading network in the brain. Participants will consist of two groups of learners between the

ages of 16 and 21: 20 older youth with typically developed reading abilities (OYTD), and 20 older youth with

reading difficulties (OYRD). We hypothesize that: (1) inhibition of the left dorsal stream will impact subsequent

learning, processing, and retention of phonologically similar pseudowords; (2) the impact of dorsal stream

inhibition on word learning behavior will be associated with baseline levels of variability in neural activity

(Hancock, Pugh, & Hoeft, 2017). For the OYTD group (Aim 1), we predict that dorsal stream inhibition will result

in slower phonological processing, slower growth in word learning accuracy, and poorer retention, specifically

for phonologically related pseudowords. In contrast, for the OYRD group (Aim 2), we predict that dorsal stream

inhibition will result in faster phonological processing and growth in word learning accuracy, as well as improved

retention specifically for phonologically related pseudowords. To better understand the nature of these effects,

we will perform exploratory analyses (Aim 3) to evaluate associations between baseline neural activation

variability during a functional magnetic resonance imaging task and individual differences in the magnitude of

modulatory effects observed in Aims 1 and 2. Completion of these aims will lay a foundation for future proposals

that will use rTMS as an adjunct to improving learning potential during treatment for persistent reading difficulties.

Grant Number: 5R21HD108576-02
NIH Institute/Center: NIH

Principal Investigator: C Arrington

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