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Abstract
Tonic and phasic (event-related) theta band power changes were analyzed in a sample
of 8 dyslexic and 8 control children. Previous research with healthy subjects suggests
that electroencephalograph (EEG) theta activity reflects the encoding of new information
into working memory. The aim of the present study was to investigate whether the processing
deficits of dyslexics are related to a reduced phasic theta response during reading.
The EEG was recorded while subjects were reading numbers, words and pseudowords and
analyzed in a lower and upper theta band (4--8 Hz). A phasic response is measured
in terms of an increase in event related band power during reading with respect to
a reference interval. Tonic power is measured in terms of (log) band power during
a reference interval.
Large group differences in tonic and phasic lower theta were found for occipital sites
where dyslexics show a complete lack of pseudoword processing. For words, only controls
show a highly selective left hemispheric processing advantage.
Dyslexics have a lack to encode pseudowords in visual working memory with a concomitant
lack of frontal processing selectivity. The upper theta band shows a different pattern
of results which can be best interpreted to reflect the effort during the encoding
process.