• Stephen J. Frost
  • Nicole Landi
  • W. Einar Mencl
  • Rebecca Sandak
  • Robert K. Fulbright
  • Eleanor T. Tejada
  • Leslie Jacobsen
  • Elena L. Grigorenko
  • R. Todd Constable
  • Kenneth R. Pugh

Using fMRI, we explored the relationship between phonological awareness (PA), a measure of metaphonological knowledge of the segmental structure of speech, and brain activation patterns during processing of print and speech in young readers from 6 to 10 years of age. Behavioral measures of PA were positively correlated with activation levels for print relative to speech tokens in superior temporal and occipito-temporal regions. Differences between print-elicited activation levels in superior temporal and inferior frontal sites were also correlated with PA measures with the direction of the correlation depending on stimulus type: positive for pronounceable pseudowords and negative for consonant strings. These results support and extend the many indications in the behavioral and neurocognitive literature that PA is a major component of skill in beginning readers and point to a developmental trajectory by which written language engages areas originally shaped by speech for learners on the path toward successful literacy acquisition.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)78-97
Number of pages20
JournalAnnals of Dyslexia
Volume59
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - May 2009

    Scopus subject areas

  • Education
  • Speech and Hearing

    Research areas

  • Functional MRI, Phonological awareness, Reading development, Superior temporal gyrus

ID: 87395683