4.2 Article

The long-lasting effects of thiamine deficiency in infancy on language: A study of a minimal-pair of twins

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROLINGUISTICS
Volume 62, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jneuroling.2021.101042

Keywords

Thiamine deficiency; Language impairment; Syntactic movement; Lexical retrieval; Reading

Funding

  1. Human Frontier collaboration on analog computations underlying language mechanisms [HFSP RGP0057/2016]
  2. Lieselotte Adler Laboratory for Research on Child Development

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This study found for the first time that thiamine deficiency in infancy can result in language disorders that persist into adulthood. Thiamine is crucial for language development during the critical period for first language acquisition in the first years of life, and deficiency during this period may cause long-lasting impairments in syntax, morphology, reading, phonological working memory, and lexical abilities.
Thiamine, vitamin B1, is a crucial component in brain development. This study examined the role thiamine plays in the development of language, by examining the long-term effects of thiamine deficiency in infancy. The participants were a young adult who had consumed a thiaminedeficient baby formula at age 1;0-1;5, and her non-identical twin sister, who had consumed a non-deficient formula. We conducted a comprehensive assessment of various language abilities, including syntax, morphology, lexical encoding and retrieval, word and nonword reading, and phonological working memory, most of which have not been previously tested in individuals who had thiamine deficiency in infancy. The twin who had thiamine deficiency showed selective deficits in various language domains, including syntactic movement, morphology, and lexical abilities (which also caused surface dyslexia in reading aloud). She also showed impaired input and output phonological working memory and impaired reading aloud of nonwords (involving voicing errors, morphological errors, and lexicalizations). Her twin sister, who did not have thiamine deficiency, showed typical language abilities. The findings show for the first time that language disorders due to thiamine deficiency in infancy persist into adulthood. In light of previous literature of adults whose thiamine deficiency took place in adulthood, who do not show language impairments, we suggest that thiamine is crucial for language development during the critical period for first language acquisition in the first years of life. Thiamine deficiency during the critical period may cause long-lasting impairments in syntax, morphology, reading, phonological working memory, and lexical abilities.

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