4.6 Article

Cortical asymmetries at different spatial hierarchies relate to phonological processing ability

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PLOS BIOLOGY
卷 20, 期 4, 页码 -

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PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pbio.3001591

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  1. National Institutes of Health (NIH)/Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development [R01 HD 069374]
  2. NIH/National Center for Research Resources [C06 RR 014516]

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The ability to map speech sounds to letters is crucial for proficient reading. This study explores the relationship between the phonological processing ability and the asymmetry of brain structures supporting language. The results suggest that the magnitude of structural asymmetry in certain cortical regions is associated with phonological decoding accuracy, supporting both the cerebral lateralization hypothesis and the canalization hypothesis to some extent.
The ability to map speech sounds to corresponding letters is critical for establishing proficient reading. People vary in this phonological processing ability, which has been hypothesized to result from variation in hemispheric asymmetries within brain regions that support language. A cerebral lateralization hypothesis predicts that more asymmetric brain structures facilitate the development of foundational reading skills like phonological processing. That is, structural asymmetries are predicted to linearly increase with ability. In contrast, a canalization hypothesis predicts that asymmetries constrain behavioral performance within a normal range. That is, structural asymmetries are predicted to quadratically relate to phonological processing, with average phonological processing occurring in people with the most asymmetric structures. These predictions were examined in relatively large samples of children (N = 424) and adults (N = 300), using a topological asymmetry analysis of T1-weighted brain images and a decoding measure of phonological processing. There was limited evidence of structural asymmetry and phonological decoding associations in classic language-related brain regions. However, and in modest support of the cerebral lateralization hypothesis, small to medium effect sizes were observed where phonological decoding accuracy increased with the magnitude of the largest structural asymmetry across left hemisphere cortical regions, but not right hemisphere cortical regions, for both the adult and pediatric samples. In support of the canalization hypothesis, small to medium effect sizes were observed where phonological decoding in the normal range was associated with increased asymmetries in specific cortical regions for both the adult and pediatric samples, which included performance monitoring and motor planning brain regions that contribute to oral and written language functions. Thus, the relevance of each hypothesis to phonological decoding may depend on the scale of brain organization.

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