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Development of white matter and reading skills
Authors:Jason D. Yeatman  Robert F. Dougherty  Michal Ben-Shachar  Brian A. Wandell
Affiliation:aDepartment of Psychology and;bStanford Center for Cognitive and Neurobiological Imaging, Stanford University, Stanford, CA, 94035; and;cThe Gonda Multidisciplinary Brain Research Center and;dDepartment of English, Bar Ilan University, Ramat Gan 52900, Israel
Abstract:White matter tissue properties are highly correlated with reading proficiency; we would like to have a model that relates the dynamics of an individual’s white matter development to their acquisition of skilled reading. The development of cerebral white matter involves multiple biological processes, and the balance between these processes differs between individuals. Cross-sectional measures of white matter mask the interplay between these processes and their connection to an individual’s cognitive development. Hence, we performed a longitudinal study to measure white-matter development (diffusion-weighted imaging) and reading development (behavioral testing) in individual children (age 7–15 y). The pattern of white-matter development differed significantly among children. In the left arcuate and left inferior longitudinal fasciculus, children with above-average reading skills initially had low fractional anisotropy (FA) that increased over the 3-y period, whereas children with below-average reading skills had higher initial FA that declined over time. We describe a dual-process model of white matter development comprising biological processes with opposing effects on FA, such as axonal myelination and pruning, to explain the pattern of results.
Keywords:plasticity   neuroprognosis   education   dti   tensor
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