| Literature DB >> 24814214 |
Mingxia Zhang1, Chuansheng Chen2, Gui Xue1, Zhong-Lin Lu3, Leilei Mei4, Hongli Xue1, Miao Wei5, Qinghua He6, Jin Li7, Qi Dong8.
Abstract
In the past decade, several studies have investigated language-general and -specific brain regions for reading. However, very limited research has examined the white matter that connects these cortical regions. By using diffusion tensor imaging (DTI), the current study investigated the common and divergent relationship between white matter integrity indexed by fractional anisotropy (FA) and native language reading abilities in 89 Chinese and 93 English speakers. Conjunction analysis revealed that for both groups, reading ability was associated with the FA of seven white matter fiber bundles in two main anatomical locations in the left hemisphere: the dorsal corona radiate/corpus callosum/superior longitudinal fasciculus which might be for phonological access, and the ventral uncinate fasciculus/external capsule/inferior fronto-occipital fasciculus which might be for semantic processing. Contrast analysis showed that the FA of the left temporal part of superior longitudinal fasciculus contributed more to reading in English than in Chinese, which is consistent with the notion that this tract is involved in grapheme-to-phoneme conversion for alphabetic language reading. These results are the first evidence of language-general and -specific white matter microstructural bases for reading.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24814214 PMCID: PMC4120769 DOI: 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2014.04.080
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neuroimage ISSN: 1053-8119 Impact factor: 6.556