Fabiola R. Gómez-Velázquez
University of Guadalajara
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Featured researches published by Fabiola R. Gómez-Velázquez.
Clinical Eeg and Neuroscience | 2014
Andrés A. González-Garrido; Fabiola R. Gómez-Velázquez; Elizabeth Rodríguez-Santillán
Reading speed and efficiency are achieved through the automatic recognition of written words. Difficulties in learning and recognizing the orthography of words can arise despite reiterative exposure to texts. This study aimed to investigate, in native Spanish-speaking late adolescents, how different levels of orthographic knowledge might result in behavioral and event-related brain potential differences during the recognition of orthographic errors. Forty-five healthy high school students were selected and divided into 3 equal groups (High, Medium, Low) according to their performance on a 5-test battery of orthographic knowledge. All participants performed an orthographic recognition task consisting of the sequential presentation of a picture (object, fruit, or animal) followed by a correctly, or incorrectly, written word (orthographic mismatch) that named the picture just shown. Electroencephalogram (EEG) recording took place simultaneously. Behavioral results showed that the Low group had a significantly lower number of correct responses and increased reaction times while processing orthographical errors. Tests showed significant positive correlations between higher performance on the experimental task and faster and more accurate reading. The P150 and P450 components showed higher voltages in the High group when processing orthographic errors, whereas N170 seemed less lateralized to the left hemisphere in the lower orthographic performers. Also, trials with orthographic errors elicited a frontal P450 component that was only evident in the High group. The present results show that higher levels of orthographic knowledge correlate with high reading performance, likely because of faster and more accurate perceptual processing, better visual orthographic representations, and top-down supervision, as the event-related brain potential findings seem to suggest.
Neuroreport | 2001
Andrés A. González-Garrido; Fabiola R. Gómez-Velázquez; Emilio Guma Diaz; Daniel Zarabozo
Three inverse serial digit detection tasks were evaluated with event-related brain potentials (ERPs) in 15 11-year-old children to determine how the increase of perceptual or memory demands could modify detection processing. Reaction times were significantly longer for the task that used visual blurring, compared to that with a greater memory demand. Difference-ERPs (target minus non-target conditions) showed three significant parietal components; one earlier positive peak at 162 ms interpreted as an index of working memory load; a same polarity 295 ms peak which probably represents a P3 analogous and a subsequent negative polarity component (520 ms) possibly involved with motor preparation. A fourth difference-component was a frontal positive peak at 680 ms, interpreted as related to task difficulty.
Spanish Journal of Psychology | 2017
Joan Guàrdia-Olmos; Daniel Zarabozo-Hurtado; Maribe Peró-Cebollero; Esteban Gudayol-Farré; Fabiola R. Gómez-Velázquez; Andrés A. González-Garrido
The study of orthographic errors in a transparent language such as Spanish is an important topic in relation to writing acquisition because in Spanish it is common to write pseudohomophones as valid words. The main objective of the present study was to explore the possible differences in activation patterns in brain areas while processing pseudohomophone orthographic errors between participants with high (High Spelling Skills (HSS)) and low (Low Spelling Skills (LSS)) spelling orthographic abilities. We hypothesize that (a) the detection of orthographic errors will activate bilateral inferior frontal gyri, and that (b) this effect will be greater in the HSS group. Two groups of 12 Mexican participants, each matched by age, were formed based on their results in a group of spelling-related ad hoc tests: HSS and LSS groups. During the fMRI session, two experimental tasks were applied involving correct and pseudohomophone substitution of Spanish words. First, a spelling recognition task and second a letter searching task. The LSS group showed, as expected, a lower number of correct responses (F(1, 21) = 52.72, p <.001, η2 = .715) and higher reaction times compared to the HSS group for the spelling task (F(1, 21) = 60.03, p <.001, η2 = .741). However, this pattern was reversed when the participants were asked to decide on the presence of a vowel in the words, regardless of spelling. The fMRI data showed an engagement of the right inferior frontal gyrus in HSS group during the spelling task. However, temporal, frontal, and subcortical brain regions of the LSS group were activated during the same task.
Neuroreport | 2017
Fabiola R. Gómez-Velázquez; Hugo Velez-Perez; Aurora Espinoza-Valdez; Rebeca Romo-Vázquez; Ricardo A. Salido-Ruiz; Vanessa D. Ruiz-Stovel; Geisa B. Gallardo-Moreno; Andrés A. González-Garrido; Gustavo Berumen
Children with mathematical difficulties usually have an impaired ability to process symbolic representations. Functional MRI methods have suggested that early frontoparietal connectivity can predict mathematic achievements; however, the study of brain connectivity during numerical processing remains unexplored. With the aim of evaluating this in children with different math proficiencies, we selected a sample of 40 children divided into two groups [high achievement (HA) and low achievement (LA)] according to their arithmetic scores in the Wide Range Achievement Test, 4th ed.. Participants performed a symbolic magnitude comparison task (i.e. determining which of two numbers is numerically larger), with simultaneous electrophysiological recording. Partial directed coherence and graph theory methods were used to estimate and depict frontoparietal connectivity in both groups. The behavioral measures showed that children with LA performed significantly slower and less accurately than their peers in the HA group. Significantly higher frontocentral connectivity was found in LA compared with HA; however, when the connectivity analysis was restricted to parietal locations, no relevant group differences were observed. These findings seem to support the notion that LA children require greater memory and attentional efforts to meet task demands, probably affecting early stages of symbolic comparison.
Archive | 2013
Andrés A. González-Garrido; Fabiola R. Gómez-Velázquez; Julieta Ramos-Loyo
Language acquisition might be oversimplified as the way in which the brain learns, perceives, represents and integrates complex sequences of verbal events. The temporal nature of sounds, structural integration, expectations, and cognitive sequencing allows the brain to construct progressively intricate representations of the environment, and with progressive maturity, even aspects of emotion or cognition not readily verbalized may be influenced by linguistically based thought processes.
Revista mexicana de investigación educativa | 2010
Fabiola R. Gómez-Velázquez; Andrés A. González-Garrido; Daniel Zarabozo; Mydori Amano
International journal of psychological studies | 2013
Andrés A. González-Garrido; Fabiola R. Gómez-Velázquez; Henrique Sequeira; Julieta Ramos-Loyo; Adriana L. López-Franco
Boletín médico del Hospital Infantil de México | 2008
José Alfonso Gutiérrez-Padilla; Andrés A. González-Garrido; Fabiola R. Gómez-Velázquez; Martha de la Torre-Gutiérrez; Luis Manuel Ávalos-Huizar; Héctor García-Hernández; Laura López-Gallo; Ricardo Martínez-Verónica
International journal of psychological studies | 2013
Fabiola R. Gómez-Velázquez; Andrés A. González-Garrido; Olga L. Vega-Gutiérrez
Gaceta Medica De Mexico | 2007
Humberto Madera-Carrillo; Andrés A. González-Garrido; Fabiola R. Gómez-Velázquez; Daniel Zarabozo Enríquez-de Rivera