4.4 Article

Large-scale Cortical Network Properties Predict Future Sound-to-Word Learning Success

Journal

JOURNAL OF COGNITIVE NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 24, Issue 5, Pages 1087-1103

Publisher

MIT PRESS
DOI: 10.1162/jocn_a_00210

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Science Foundation [BCS-0719666]
  2. National Institutes of Health [R01DC008333, R21DC009652, K02AG035382]
  3. Northwestern University Office of the Provost

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The human brain possesses a remarkable capacity to interpret and recall novel sounds as spoken language. These linguistic abilities arise from complex processing spanning a widely distributed cortical network and are characterized by marked individual variation. Recently, graph theoretical analysis has facilitated the exploration of how such aspects of large-scale brain functional organization may underlie cognitive performance. Brain functional networks are known to possess small-world topologies characterized by efficient global and local information transfer, but whether these properties relate to language learning abilities remains unknown. Here we applied graph theory to construct large-scale cortical functional networks from cerebral hemodynamic (fMRI) responses acquired during an auditory pitch discrimination task and found that such network properties were associated with participants 'future success in learning words of an artificial spoken language. Successful learners possessed networks with reduced local efficiency but increased global efficiency relative to less successful learners and had a more cost-efficient network organization. Regionally, successful and less successful learners exhibited differences in these network properties spanning bilateral prefrontal, parietal, and right temporal cortex, overlapping a core network of auditory language areas. These results suggest that efficient cortical network organization is associated with sound-to-word learning abilities among healthy, younger adults.

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