4.5 Article

Age-Related Sex Differences in Language Lateralization: A Magnetoencephalography Study in Children

Journal

DEVELOPMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY
Volume 50, Issue 9, Pages 2276-2284

Publisher

AMER PSYCHOLOGICAL ASSOC
DOI: 10.1037/a0037470

Keywords

magnetoencephalography; verb generation; inferior frontal gyrus; event-related desynchronization; gamma oscillations

Funding

  1. Canadian Institutes of Health Research [89961-1] Funding Source: Medline
  2. CIHR [MOP-89961] Funding Source: Medline

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It is well supported by behavioral and neuroimaging studies that typical language function is lateralized to the left hemisphere in the adult brain and this laterality is less well defined in children. The behavioral literature suggests there maybe be sex differences in language development, but this has not been examined systematically with neuroimaging. In this study, magnetoencephalography was used to investigate the spatiotemporal patterns of language lateralization as a function of age and sex. Eighty typically developing children (46 female, 34 male; 4-18 years) participated in an overt visual verb generation task. An analysis method called differential beamforming was used to analyze language-related changes in oscillatory activity referred to as low-gamma event-related desynchrony (ERD). The proportion of ERD over language areas relative to total ERD was calculated. We found different patterns of laterality between boys and girls. Boys showed left-hemisphere lateralization in the frontal and temporal language-related areas across age groups, whereas girls showed a more bilateral pattern, particularly in frontal language-related areas. Differences in patterns of ERD were most striking between boys and girls in the younger age groups, and these patterns became more similar with increasing age, specifically in the preteen years. Our findings show sex differences in language lateralization during childhood; however, these differences do not seem to persist into adulthood. We present possible explanations for these differences. We also discuss the implications of these findings for presurgical language mapping in children and highlight the importance of examining the question of sex-related language differences across development.

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