Krafnick Anthony J, Evans Tanya M
Psychology Department, Dominican University, River Forest, IL, United States.
Center for Advanced Study of Teaching and Learning, Curry School of Education and Human Development, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, VA, United States.
Front Psychol. 2019 Jan 11;9:2669. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2018.02669. eCollection 2018.
Understanding sex differences at the neurobiological level has become increasingly crucial in both basic and applied research. In the study of developmental dyslexia, early neuroimaging investigations were dominated by male-only or male-dominated samples, due at least in part to males being diagnosed more frequently. While recent studies more consistently balance the inclusion of both sexes, there has been little movement toward directly characterizing potential sex differences of the disorder. However, a string of recent work suggests that the brain basis of dyslexia may indeed be different in males and females. This potential sex difference has implications for existing models of dyslexia, and would inform approaches to the remediation of reading difficulties. This article reviews recent evidence for sex differences in dyslexia, discusses the impact these studies have on the understanding of the brain basis of dyslexia, and provides a framework for how these differential neuroanatomical profiles may develop.
在基础研究和应用研究中,从神经生物学层面理解性别差异变得愈发关键。在发育性阅读障碍的研究中,早期的神经影像学调查主要以仅含男性或男性占主导的样本为主,至少部分原因是男性被诊断出阅读障碍的频率更高。虽然近期的研究在纳入两性样本方面更加一致,但在直接刻画该障碍潜在的性别差异方面进展甚微。然而,最近一系列研究表明,阅读障碍的大脑基础在男性和女性中可能确实存在差异。这种潜在的性别差异对现有的阅读障碍模型具有重要意义,并将为解决阅读困难的方法提供参考。本文综述了阅读障碍中性别差异的最新证据,讨论了这些研究对理解阅读障碍大脑基础的影响,并提供了一个关于这些不同神经解剖学特征可能如何形成的框架。