Department of Communication Sciences and Disorders, The University of Texas at Austin, Austin, TX, USA.
Department of Psychology, The University of Texas at Austin, Austin, TX, USA.
Neuroimage. 2017 Sep;158:90-98. doi: 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2017.06.044. Epub 2017 Jun 21.
Attempts to characterize the neural differences between individuals with and without dyslexia generally point to reduced activation in and connectivity between brain areas in a reading network composed of the inferior frontal gyrus, the ventral occipito-temporal cortex, and the dorsal temporo-parietal circuit. However, developmental work on brain activity during reading has indicated that some brain areas show developmental decreases in activation with age. Thus, reading network connectivity may also show decreases that are positively associated with increases in reading ability. However, the developmental trajectory of reading network connectivity in typically developing readers is not yet well established. In the current study, we use a longitudinal design to determine how connectivity changes over time, and how these changes relate to changes in reading skill. We find that longitudinal increases in reading ability are associated with higher initial connectivity in the dorsal stream between fusiform and inferior parietal cortex, implicated in phonological decoding, followed by decreases in connectivity in this stream over time. We further find that increases in reading ability are supported by maintenance of connectivity in the ventral stream between inferior occipital and fusiform cortex, suggesting a more mature automatic orthographic recognition strategy. Readers who show little reading improvement over time do not attain high levels of connectivity in the dorsal stream at any time point, and their ventral stream connectivity decreases over time. These results together suggest that superior reading ability is initially supported by phonological decoding, with a decreased reliance on this strategy as reading becomes more automated. Our results indicate that development of the dorsal and ventral streams are closely linked, and support the hypothesis that a decrease in the dorsal stream is important for ventral stream development.
试图描述阅读网络中个体之间的神经差异,阅读网络包括额下回、腹侧枕颞皮质和背侧颞顶叶回路,一般指向阅读网络中大脑区域的激活减少和连接减少。然而,阅读过程中的大脑活动发展性研究表明,一些大脑区域的激活随着年龄的增长而减少。因此,阅读网络的连接也可能会减少,而这与阅读能力的提高是正相关的。然而,在典型的发展读者中,阅读网络连接的发展轨迹还没有很好地建立起来。在当前的研究中,我们使用纵向设计来确定连接是如何随时间变化的,以及这些变化与阅读技能的变化有何关系。我们发现,阅读能力的纵向提高与背侧流中额下回和下顶叶之间连接的初始增加有关,背侧流连接与语音解码有关,随后随着时间的推移,该连接逐渐减少。我们进一步发现,阅读能力的提高与腹侧流中下枕叶和额下回之间的连接保持有关,这表明了更成熟的自动正字法识别策略。随着时间的推移,阅读能力提高很少的读者在任何时间点都无法达到背侧流的高水平连接,而且他们的腹侧流连接随着时间的推移而减少。这些结果共同表明,优秀的阅读能力最初是由语音解码支持的,随着阅读变得更加自动化,对这种策略的依赖减少。我们的结果表明,背侧流和腹侧流的发展是密切相关的,支持了背侧流减少对于腹侧流发展很重要的假设。