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Control Engagement During Sentence and Inhibition fMRI Tasks in Children With Reading Difficulties.


ABSTRACT: Recent reading research implicates executive control regions as sites of difference in struggling readers. However, as studies often employ only reading or language tasks, the extent of deviation in control engagement in children with reading difficulties is not known. The current study investigated activation in reading and executive control brain regions during both a sentence comprehension task and a nonlexical inhibitory control task in third-fifth grade children with and without reading difficulties. We employed both categorical (group-based) and individual difference approaches to relate reading ability to brain activity. During sentence comprehension, struggling readers had less activation in the left posterior temporal cortex, previously implicated in language, semantic, and reading research. Greater negative activity (relative to fixation) during sentence comprehension in a left inferior parietal region from the executive control literature correlated with poorer reading ability. Greater comprehension scores were associated with less dorsal anterior cingulate activity during the sentence comprehension task. Unlike the sentence task, there were no significant differences between struggling and nonstruggling readers for the nonlexical inhibitory control task. Thus, differences in executive control engagement were largely specific to reading, rather than a general control deficit across tasks in children with reading difficulties, informing future intervention research.

SUBMITTER: Roe MA 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC6132278 | biostudies-literature | 2018 Oct

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Control Engagement During Sentence and Inhibition fMRI Tasks in Children With Reading Difficulties.

Roe Mary Abbe MA   Martinez Joel E JE   Mumford Jeanette A JA   Taylor W Patrick WP   Cirino Paul T PT   Fletcher Jack M JM   Juranek Jenifer J   Church Jessica A JA  

Cerebral cortex (New York, N.Y. : 1991) 20181001 10


Recent reading research implicates executive control regions as sites of difference in struggling readers. However, as studies often employ only reading or language tasks, the extent of deviation in control engagement in children with reading difficulties is not known. The current study investigated activation in reading and executive control brain regions during both a sentence comprehension task and a nonlexical inhibitory control task in third-fifth grade children with and without reading dif  ...[more]

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