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Brain connectivity associated with cascading levels of language

Typical oral and written language learners (controls) (5 girls, 4 boys) completed fMRI reading judgment tasks (sub-word grapheme-phoneme, word spelling, sentences with and without spelling foils, affixed words, sentences with and without affix foils, and multi-sentence). Analyses identified connecti...

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Autores principales: Richards, Todd, Nagy, William, Abbott, Robert, Berninger, Virginia
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5261811/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28127444
http://dx.doi.org/10.15761/JSIN.1000139
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author Richards, Todd
Nagy, William
Abbott, Robert
Berninger, Virginia
author_facet Richards, Todd
Nagy, William
Abbott, Robert
Berninger, Virginia
author_sort Richards, Todd
collection PubMed
description Typical oral and written language learners (controls) (5 girls, 4 boys) completed fMRI reading judgment tasks (sub-word grapheme-phoneme, word spelling, sentences with and without spelling foils, affixed words, sentences with and without affix foils, and multi-sentence). Analyses identified connectivity within and across adjacent levels (units) of language in reading: from subword to word to syntax in Set I and from word to syntax to multi-sentence in Set II). Typicals were compared to (a) students with dyslexia (6 girls, 10 boys) on the subword and word tasks in Set I related to levels of language impaired in dyslexia, and (b) students with oral and written language learning disability (OWL LD) (3 girls, 2 boys) on the morphology and syntax tasks in Set II, related to levels of language impaired in OWL LD. Results for typical language learners showed that adjacent levels of language in the reading brain share common and unique connectivity. The dyslexia group showed over-connectivity to a greater degree on the imaging tasks related to their levels of language impairments than the OWL LD group who showed under-connectivity to a greater degree than did the dyslexia group on the imaging tasks related to their levels of language impairment. Results for these students in grades 4 to 9 (ages 9 to 14) are discussed in reference to the contribution of patterns of connectivity across levels of language to understanding the nature of persisting dyslexia and dysgraphia despite early intervention.
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spelling pubmed-52618112017-01-24 Brain connectivity associated with cascading levels of language Richards, Todd Nagy, William Abbott, Robert Berninger, Virginia J Syst Integr Neurosci Article Typical oral and written language learners (controls) (5 girls, 4 boys) completed fMRI reading judgment tasks (sub-word grapheme-phoneme, word spelling, sentences with and without spelling foils, affixed words, sentences with and without affix foils, and multi-sentence). Analyses identified connectivity within and across adjacent levels (units) of language in reading: from subword to word to syntax in Set I and from word to syntax to multi-sentence in Set II). Typicals were compared to (a) students with dyslexia (6 girls, 10 boys) on the subword and word tasks in Set I related to levels of language impaired in dyslexia, and (b) students with oral and written language learning disability (OWL LD) (3 girls, 2 boys) on the morphology and syntax tasks in Set II, related to levels of language impaired in OWL LD. Results for typical language learners showed that adjacent levels of language in the reading brain share common and unique connectivity. The dyslexia group showed over-connectivity to a greater degree on the imaging tasks related to their levels of language impairments than the OWL LD group who showed under-connectivity to a greater degree than did the dyslexia group on the imaging tasks related to their levels of language impairment. Results for these students in grades 4 to 9 (ages 9 to 14) are discussed in reference to the contribution of patterns of connectivity across levels of language to understanding the nature of persisting dyslexia and dysgraphia despite early intervention. 2016-11-10 2016 /pmc/articles/PMC5261811/ /pubmed/28127444 http://dx.doi.org/10.15761/JSIN.1000139 Text en http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Article
Richards, Todd
Nagy, William
Abbott, Robert
Berninger, Virginia
Brain connectivity associated with cascading levels of language
title Brain connectivity associated with cascading levels of language
title_full Brain connectivity associated with cascading levels of language
title_fullStr Brain connectivity associated with cascading levels of language
title_full_unstemmed Brain connectivity associated with cascading levels of language
title_short Brain connectivity associated with cascading levels of language
title_sort brain connectivity associated with cascading levels of language
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5261811/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28127444
http://dx.doi.org/10.15761/JSIN.1000139
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