Distinct neural correlates of poor decoding and poor comprehension in children with reading disability

Author:

Feng Guoyan12ORCID,Yan Xiaohui3,Shen Linling1,Perkins Kyle4,Mao Jiaqi1,Wu Yu1,Shi Liping1,Cao Fan5

Affiliation:

1. Department of Psychology , Sun Yat-Sen University, 132 East Outer Ring Road, University Town, Panyu Ddiatrict, Guangzhou, 510006 , China

2. School of Management , Guangzhou Xinhua University, 19 Huamei Road, Tianhe District, Guangzhou, 510520 , China

3. School of Education Science , Xinyang Normal University, 237 Nanhu Road, Xinyang, 464000 , China

4. Department of Teaching and Learning , College of Arts, Sciences and Education, Florida International University (retired professor), Miami, FL 33199 , USA

5. Department of Psychology , the University of Hong Kong, Pokfulam Road, Hong Kong, China

Abstract

Abstract Reading disability (RD) can manifest itself as a word decoding problem or a reading comprehension problem. In the current study, we identified 3 subtypes of RD: poor decoders (PD), poor comprehenders (PC), and poor-in-both (PB). We found that PD had greater deficits in meta-linguistic skills such as phonological awareness, orthographic skills, and morphological skills than PC, whereas PC had greater deficits in listening comprehension than PD. In the brain, we also found different patterns of deficits during an auditory rhyming judgment task using functional magnetic resonance imaging. PD showed less activation than PC and age controls in the left dorsal inferior frontal gyrus (IFG) and pre-supplementary motor area (SMA), brain activation of which was correlated with phonological awareness and working memory. In contrast, PC showed less activation in the left fusiform gyrus than PD and age controls, which was correlated with reading comprehension fluency and morphological skill. Last, PB showed both PD’s and PC’s deficits, as well as additional deficits in the bilateral lingual gyri. Our findings contribute to revealing different neural signatures of poor decoding and poor comprehension, which are distinct disorders but co-occur very often. These findings implicate possibility and necessity of precise diagnosis and individualized intervention.

Funder

Science and Technology Program of Guangzhou, China

Guangdong Planning Office of Philosophy and Social Science

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience,Cognitive Neuroscience

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