Author:
Ashburn Sikoya M.,Matejko Anna A.,Eden Guinevere F.
Abstract
BackgroundReading and math constitute important academic skills, and as such, reading disability (RD or developmental dyslexia) and math disability (MD or developmental dyscalculia) can have negative consequences for children’s educational progress. Although RD and MD are different learning disabilities, they frequently co-occur. Separate theories have implicated the cerebellum and its cortical connections in RD and in MD, suggesting that children with combined reading and math disability (RD + MD) may have altered cerebellar function and disrupted functional connectivity between the cerebellum and cortex during reading and during arithmetic processing.MethodsHere we compared Control and RD + MD groups during a reading task as well as during an arithmetic task on (i) activation of the cerebellum, (ii) background functional connectivity, and (iii) task-dependent functional connectivity between the cerebellum and the cortex.ResultsThe two groups (Control, RD + MD) did not differ for either task (reading, arithmetic) on any of the three measures (activation, background functional connectivity, task-dependent functional connectivity).ConclusionThese results do not support theories that children’s deficits in reading and math originate in the cerebellum.
Funder
Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development
National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences
National Institutes of Health
National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke
National Science Foundation