Brain connectivity and academic skills in English learners

Author:

Nugiel Tehila1ORCID,Demeter Damion V2ORCID,Mitchell Mackenzie E3ORCID,Garza AnnaCarolina4,Hernandez Arturo E5ORCID,Juranek Jenifer6ORCID,Church Jessica A47ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Florida State University Department of Psychology, , Tallahassee, FL 32304, United States

2. University of California San Diego Department of Cognitive Science, , La Jolla, CA 92037, United States

3. University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Department of Psychology and Neuroscience, , Chapel Hill, NC 27599, United States

4. The University of Texas at Austin Department of Psychology, , Austin, TX 78712, United States

5. University of Houston Department of Psychology, , Houston, TX 77204, United States

6. University of Texas Health Science Center Department of Pediatrics, , Houston, TX 77225, United States

7. The University of Texas at Austin Biomedical Imaging Center, , Austin, TX 78712, United States

Abstract

Abstract English learners (ELs) are a rapidly growing population in schools in the United States with limited experience and proficiency in English. To better understand the path for EL’s academic success in school, it is important to understand how EL’s brain systems are used for academic learning in English. We studied, in a cohort of Hispanic middle-schoolers (n = 45, 22F) with limited English proficiency and a wide range of reading and math abilities, brain network properties related to academic abilities. We applied a method for localizing brain regions of interest (ROIs) that are group-constrained, yet individually specific, to test how resting state functional connectivity between regions that are important for academic learning (reading, math, and cognitive control regions) are related to academic abilities. ROIs were selected from task localizers probing reading and math skills in the same participants. We found that connectivity across all ROIs, as well as connectivity of just the cognitive control ROIs, were positively related to measures of reading skills but not math skills. This work suggests that cognitive control brain systems have a central role for reading in ELs. Our results also indicate that an individualized approach for localizing brain function may clarify brain-behavior relationships.

Funder

National Institute of Child Health and Human Development

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience,Cognitive Neuroscience

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