Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
3072320 NeuroImage 2010 13 Pages PDF
Abstract

Recent theories of developmental dyslexia explain reading deficits in terms of deficient phonological awareness, attention, visual and auditory processing, or automaticity. Since dyslexia has a neurobiological basis, the question arises how the reader's proficiency in these cognitive variables affects the brain regions involved in visual word recognition. This question was addressed in two fMRI experiments with 19 normally reading children (Experiment 1) and 19 children with dyslexia (Experiment 2). First, reading-specific brain activation was assessed by contrasting the BOLD signal for reading aloud words vs. overtly naming pictures of real objects. Next, ANCOVAs with brain activation during reading the individuals’ scores for all five cognitive variables assessed outside the scanner as covariates were performed. Whereas the normal readers’ brain activation during reading showed co-variation effects predominantly in the right hemisphere, the reverse pattern was observed for the dyslexics. In particular, middle frontal gyrus, inferior parietal cortex, and precuneus showed contralateral effects for controls as compared to dyslexics. In line with earlier findings in the literature, these data hint at a global change in hemispheric asymmetry during cognitive processing in dyslexic readers, which, in turn, might affect reading proficiency.

Research highlights► Brain activation during reading is modulated by a number of cognitive variables. ► This modulation was observed in the right hemisphere for normal readers. ► In dyslexics, however, modulation was not in the right but in the left hemisphere. ► These findings are a potential basis for altered functional asymmetry in dyslexia. ► Moreover, they provide some explanation for cognitive subtypes of dyslexia.

Related Topics
Life Sciences Neuroscience Cognitive Neuroscience
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