journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38702345/phonological-awareness-mediates-the-relationship-between-dcdc2-and-reading-performance-with-home-environment
#1
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Miao Li, Mellissa M C DeMille, Maureen W Lovett, Joan Bosson-Heenan, Jan C Frijters, Jeffrey R Gruen
Proficient reading requires critical phonological processing skill that interacts with both genetic and environmental factors. However, the precise nature of the relationships between phonological processing and genetic and environmental factors are poorly understood. We analyzed data from the Genes, Reading and Dyslexia (GRaD) Study on 1419 children ages 8-15 years from African-American and Hispanic-American family backgrounds living in North America. The analyses showed that phonological awareness mediated the relationship between DCDC2-READ1 and reading outcomes when parental education and socioeconomic status was low...
May 3, 2024: NPJ Science of Learning
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38698023/body-part-specificity-for-learning-of-multiple-prior-distributions-in-human-coincidence-timing
#2
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Yoshiki Matsumura, Neil W Roach, James Heron, Makoto Miyazaki
During timing tasks, the brain learns the statistical distribution of target intervals and integrates this prior knowledge with sensory inputs to optimise task performance. Daily events can have different temporal statistics (e.g., fastball/slowball in baseball batting), making it important to learn and retain multiple priors. However, the rules governing this process are not yet understood. Here, we demonstrate that the learning of multiple prior distributions in a coincidence timing task is characterised by body-part specificity...
May 2, 2024: NPJ Science of Learning
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38693153/speech-connectedness-predicts-reading-performance-three-months-in-advance-a-longitudinal-experiment
#3
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Bárbara Malcorra, Marina Ribeiro, Luísa Jensen, Giovana Gomes, Tamara Meletti, Natália Bezerra Mota
Aiming to verify the predictive value of oral narrative structure on reading acquisition, we followed 253 children (first and second graders) during an entire school year, assessing oral narratives and reading performances in five sessions. Transcriptions of oral narratives were represented as word-recurrence graphs to measure connectedness attributes. Connectedness predicted performance in phonological awareness, reading comprehension, and word reading accuracy 3-4 months in advance.
May 2, 2024: NPJ Science of Learning
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38658711/optimizing-self-organized-study-orders-combining-refutations-and-metacognitive-prompts-improves-the-use-of-interleaved-practice
#4
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Erdem Onan, Felicitas Biwer, Roman Abel, Wisnu Wiradhany, Anique de Bruin
During category learning, students struggle to create an optimal study order: They often study one category at a time (i.e., blocked practice) instead of alternating between different categories (i.e., interleaved practice). Several interventions to improve self-study of categorical learning have been proposed, but these interventions have only been tested in learning tasks where students did not create the study order themselves. Instead, they decided which type of study order to follow. This pre-registered experiment examined whether an intervention that combines refutations and metacognitive prompts can enhance students' engagement in interleaved practice, specifically when they organize the learning materials themselves...
April 24, 2024: NPJ Science of Learning
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38637595/alpha-neurofeedback-training-improves-visual-working-memory-in-healthy-individuals
#5
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Wenbin Zhou, Wenya Nan, Kaiwen Xiong, Yixuan Ku
Neurofeedback (NF) training is a closed-loop brain training in which participants learn to regulate their neural activation. NF training of alpha (8-12 Hz) activity has been reported to enhance working memory capacity, but whether it affects the precision in working memory has not yet been explored. Moreover, whether NF training distinctively influences performance in different types of working memory tasks remains unclear. Therefore, the present study conducted a randomized, single-blind, sham-controlled experiment to investigate how alpha NF training affected the capacity and precision of working memory, as well as the related neural change...
April 18, 2024: NPJ Science of Learning
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38622159/an-update-on-recent-advances-in-targeted-memory-reactivation-during-sleep
#6
REVIEW
Julia Carbone, Susanne Diekelmann
Targeted Memory Reactivation (TMR) is a noninvasive tool to manipulate memory consolidation during sleep. TMR builds on the brain's natural processes of memory reactivation during sleep and aims to facilitate or bias these processes in a certain direction. The basis of this technique is the association of learning content with sensory cues, such as odors or sounds, that are presented during subsequent sleep to promote memory reactivation. Research on TMR has drastically increased over the last decade with rapid developments...
April 15, 2024: NPJ Science of Learning
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38609413/evidence-for-a-competitive-relationship-between-executive-functions-and-statistical-learning
#7
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Felipe Pedraza, Bence C Farkas, Teodóra Vékony, Frederic Haesebaert, Romane Phelipon, Imola Mihalecz, Karolina Janacsek, Royce Anders, Barbara Tillmann, Gaën Plancher, Dezső Németh
The ability of the brain to extract patterns from the environment and predict future events, known as statistical learning, has been proposed to interact in a competitive manner with prefrontal lobe-related networks and their characteristic cognitive or executive functions. However, it remains unclear whether these cognitive functions also possess a competitive relationship with implicit statistical learning across individuals and at the level of latent executive function components. In order to address this currently unknown aspect, we investigated, in two independent experiments (NStudy1  = 186, NStudy2  = 157), the relationship between implicit statistical learning, measured by the Alternating Serial Reaction Time task, and executive functions, measured by multiple neuropsychological tests...
April 12, 2024: NPJ Science of Learning
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38600183/investigating-lexical-categorization-in-reading-based-on-joint-diagnostic-and-training-approaches-for-language-learners
#8
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Benjamin Gagl, Klara Gregorová
Efficient reading is essential for societal participation, so reading proficiency is a central educational goal. Here, we use an individualized diagnostics and training framework to investigate processes in visual word recognition and evaluate its usefulness for detecting training responders. We (i) motivated a training procedure based on the Lexical Categorization Model (LCM) to introduce the framework. The LCM describes pre-lexical orthographic processing implemented in the left-ventral occipital cortex and is vital to reading...
April 10, 2024: NPJ Science of Learning
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38594315/neglecting-students-socio-emotional-skills-magnified-learning-losses-during-the-pandemic
#9
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Guilherme Lichand, Julien Christen, Eppie Van Egeraat
Did the dramatic learning losses from remote learning in the context of COVID-19 stem at least partly from schools having overlooked students' socio-emotional skills-such as their ability to self-regulate emotions, their mental models, motivation, and grit-during the emergency transition to remote learning? We study this question using a cluster-randomized control trial with 18,256 high-school students across 87 schools in the State of Goiás, Brazil. The intervention sent behavioral nudges through text messages to students or their caregivers, targeting their socio-emotional skills during remote learning...
April 9, 2024: NPJ Science of Learning
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38565857/fostering-inclusion-in-eeg-measures-of-pediatric-brain-activity
#10
REVIEW
Eryn J Adams, Molly E Scott, Melina Amarante, Chanel A Ramírez, Stephanie J Rowley, Kimberly G Noble, Sonya V Troller-Renfree
The past two decades have seen a rapid increase in neuroscientific evidence being used to characterize how contextual, structural, and societal factors shape cognition and school readiness. Measures of functional brain activity are increasingly viewed as markers of child development and biomarkers that could be employed to track the impact of interventions. While electroencephalography (EEG) provides a promising tool to understand educational inequities, traditional EEG data acquisition is commonly limited in some racial and ethnic groups due to hair types and styles...
April 2, 2024: NPJ Science of Learning
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38538593/a-genome-wide-association-study-of-chinese-and-english-language-phenotypes-in-hong-kong-chinese-children
#11
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Yu-Ping Lin, Yujia Shi, Ruoyu Zhang, Xiao Xue, Shitao Rao, Liangying Yin, Kelvin Fai Hong Lui, Dora Jue Pan, Urs Maurer, Kwong-Wai Choy, Silvia Paracchini, Catherine McBride, Hon-Cheong So
Dyslexia and developmental language disorders are important learning difficulties. However, their genetic basis remains poorly understood, and most genetic studies were performed on Europeans. There is a lack of genome-wide association studies (GWAS) on literacy phenotypes of Chinese as a native language and English as a second language (ESL) in a Chinese population. In this study, we conducted GWAS on 34 reading/language-related phenotypes in Hong Kong Chinese bilingual children (including both twins and singletons; total N = 1046)...
March 27, 2024: NPJ Science of Learning
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38514702/the-neural-and-cognitive-basis-of-expository-text-comprehension
#12
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Timothy A Keller, Robert A Mason, Aliza E Legg, Marcel Adam Just
As science and technology rapidly progress, it becomes increasingly important to understand how individuals comprehend expository technical texts that explain these advances. This study examined differences in individual readers' technical comprehension performance and differences among texts, using functional brain imaging to measure regional brain activity while students read passages on technical topics and then took a comprehension test. Better comprehension of the technical passages was related to higher activation in regions of the left inferior frontal gyrus, left superior parietal lobe, bilateral dorsolateral prefrontal cortex, and bilateral hippocampus...
March 21, 2024: NPJ Science of Learning
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38514689/action-video-games-normalise-the-phonemic-awareness-in-pre-readers-at-risk-for-developmental-dyslexia
#13
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Sara Bertoni, Chiara Andreola, Sara Mascheretti, Sandro Franceschini, Milena Ruffino, Vittoria Trezzi, Massimo Molteni, Maria Enrica Sali, Antonio Salandi, Ombretta Gaggi, Claudio Palazzi, Simone Gori, Andrea Facoetti
Action video-games (AVGs) could improve reading efficiency, enhancing not only visual attention but also phonological processing. Here we tested the AVG effects upon three consolidated language-based predictors of reading development in a sample of 79 pre-readers at-risk and 41 non-at-risk for developmental dyslexia. At-risk children were impaired in either phonemic awareness (i.e., phoneme discrimination task), phonological working memory (i.e., pseudoword repetition task) or rapid automatized naming (i.e...
March 21, 2024: NPJ Science of Learning
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38509146/utilizing-epigenetics-to-study-the-shared-nature-of-development-and-biological-aging-across-the-lifespan
#14
REVIEW
Laurel Raffington
Recently, biological aging has been quantified in DNA-methylation samples of older adults and applied as so-called "methylation profile scores" (MPSs) in separate target samples, including samples of children. This nascent research indicates that (1) biological aging can be quantified early in the life course, decades before the onset of aging-related disease, (2) is affected by common environmental predictors of childhood development, and (3) shows overlap with "developmental processes" (e.g., puberty). Because the MPSs were computed using algorithms developed in adults, these studies indicate a molecular link between childhood environments, development, and adult biological aging...
March 21, 2024: NPJ Science of Learning
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38509108/micro-consolidation-occurs-when-learning-an-implicit-motor-sequence-but-is-not-influenced-by-hiit-exercise
#15
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Emily Brooks, Sarah Wallis, Joshua Hendrikse, James Coxon
We investigated if micro-consolidation, a phenomenon recently discovered during the brief rest periods between practice when learning an explicit motor sequence, generalises to learning an implicit motor sequence task. We demonstrate micro-consolidation occurs in the absence of explicit sequence awareness. We also investigated the effect of a preceding bout of high-intensity exercise, as exercise is known to augment the consolidation of new motor skills. Micro-consolidation was not modified by exercise.
March 20, 2024: NPJ Science of Learning
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38499583/states-of-epistemic-curiosity-interfere-with-memory-for-incidental-scholastic-facts
#16
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Nicole E Keller, Carola Salvi, Emily K Leiker, Matthias J Gruber, Joseph E Dunsmoor
Curiosity can be a powerful motivator to learn and retain new information. Evidence shows that high states of curiosity elicited by a specific source (i.e., a trivia question) can promote memory for incidental stimuli (non-target) presented close in time. The spreading effect of curiosity states on memory for other information has potential for educational applications. Specifically, it could provide techniques to improve learning for information that did not spark a sense of curiosity on its own. Here, we investigated how high states of curiosity induced through trivia questions affect memory performance for unrelated scholastic facts (e...
March 18, 2024: NPJ Science of Learning
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38499525/electrocortical-correlates-of-attention-differentiate-individual-capacity-in-associative-learning
#17
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Elsa Raynal, Kate Schipper, Catherine Brandner, Paolo Ruggeri, Jérôme Barral
Associative learning abilities vary considerably among individuals, with attentional processes suggested to play a role in these variations. However, the relationship between attentional processes and individual differences in associative learning remains unclear, and whether these variations reflect in event-related potentials (ERPs) is unknown. This study aimed to investigate the relationship between attentional processes and associative learning by recording electrocortical activity of 38 young adults (18-32 years) during an associative learning task...
March 18, 2024: NPJ Science of Learning
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38491021/math-items-about-real-world-content-lower-test-scores-of-students-from-families-with-low-socioeconomic-status
#18
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Marjolein Muskens, Willem E Frankenhuis, Lex Borghans
In many countries, standardized math tests are important for achieving academic success. Here, we examine whether content of items, the story that explains a mathematical question, biases performance of low-SES students. In a large-scale cohort study of Trends in International Mathematics and Science Studies (TIMSS)-including data from 58 countries from students in grades 4 and 8 (N = 5501,165)-we examine whether item content that is more likely related to challenges for low-SES students (money, food, social relationships) improves their performance, compared with their average math performance...
March 15, 2024: NPJ Science of Learning
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38480747/observational-reinforcement-learning-in-children-and-young-adults
#19
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Julia M Rodriguez Buritica, Ben Eppinger, Hauke R Heekeren, Eveline A Crone, Anna C K van Duijvenvoorde
Observational learning is essential for the acquisition of new behavior in educational practices and daily life and serves as an important mechanism for human cognitive and social-emotional development. However, we know little about its underlying neurocomputational mechanisms from a developmental perspective. In this study we used model-based fMRI to investigate differences in observational learning and individual learning between children and younger adults. Prediction errors (PE), the difference between experienced and predicted outcomes, related positively to striatal and ventral medial prefrontal cortex activation during individual learning and showed no age-related differences...
March 13, 2024: NPJ Science of Learning
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38467686/interplay-of-socioeconomic-status-cognition-and-school-performance-in-the-abcd-sample
#20
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Lara Langensee, Theodor Rumetshofer, Johan Mårtensson
Coming from a disadvantaged background can have negative impact on an individual's educational trajectory. Some people however seem unaffected and cope well with the demands and challenges posed by school education, despite growing up in adverse conditions, a phenomenon termed academic resilience. While it is uncertain which underlying factors make some people more likely to circumvent unfavorable odds than others, both socioeconomic status (SES) and cognitive ability have robustly been linked to school performance...
March 11, 2024: NPJ Science of Learning
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