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No population bias to left-hemisphere language in 4-year-olds with language impairment

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No population bias to left-hemisphere language in 4-year-olds with language impairment. / Bishop, Dorothy V.M.; Holt, Georgina; Whitehouse, Andrew J.O. et al.
In: Peerj, Vol. 2, e507, 2014.

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Bishop, DVM, Holt, G, Whitehouse, AJO, Groen, M & Tavano, A (ed.) 2014, 'No population bias to left-hemisphere language in 4-year-olds with language impairment', Peerj, vol. 2, e507. https://doi.org/10.7717/peerj.507

APA

Bishop, D. V. M., Holt, G., Whitehouse, A. J. O., Groen, M., & Tavano, A. (Ed.) (2014). No population bias to left-hemisphere language in 4-year-olds with language impairment. Peerj, 2, Article e507. https://doi.org/10.7717/peerj.507

Vancouver

Bishop DVM, Holt G, Whitehouse AJO, Groen M, Tavano A, (ed.). No population bias to left-hemisphere language in 4-year-olds with language impairment. Peerj. 2014;2:e507. doi: 10.7717/peerj.507

Author

Bishop, Dorothy V.M. ; Holt, Georgina ; Whitehouse, Andrew J.O. et al. / No population bias to left-hemisphere language in 4-year-olds with language impairment. In: Peerj. 2014 ; Vol. 2.

Bibtex

@article{432ed6f23a2c42d0948ed74372142591,
title = "No population bias to left-hemisphere language in 4-year-olds with language impairment",
abstract = " Background. An apparent paradox in the field of neuropsychology is that people with atypical cerebral lateralization do not appear to suffer any cognitive disadvantage, yet atypical cerebral lateralization is more common in children and adults with developmental language disorders. This study was designed to explore possible reasons for this puzzling pattern of results. Methods. We used functional transcranial Doppler ultrasound (fTCD) to assess cerebral blood flow during language production in 57 four-year-olds, including 15 children who had been late-talkers when first seen at 20 months of age. We categorized cerebral lateralization as left, right or bilateral, and compared proportions with each type of laterality with those seen in a previously tested sample of children aged 6–16 years. We also compared language scores at 4 years for those with typical and atypical lateralization, and then looked at the association the opposite way: comparing those with typical or impaired language in terms of their cerebral lateralization. Results. The distribution of types of cerebral lateralization was similar for 4-year-olds to that seen in older children. Overall, cerebral lateralization was not predictive of language level. However, for children who had language difficulties at 20 months and/or 4 years (N = 21), there was no population bias to left-hemisphere language activation, whereas children without language problems at either age showed a pronounced bias to left-sided language lateralization. Nevertheless, many children with right hemisphere language had no indications of language difficulties, confirming that atypical cerebral asymmetry is not a direct cause of problems. Conclusions. We suggest that atypical lateralization at the individual level is not associated with language impairment. However, lack of lateralization at the population level is a marker of risk for language impairment, which could be due to genetic or non-genetic causes.",
keywords = "Language impairment, Cerebral lateralization, Transcranial functional Doppler ultrasound, Child, Asymmetry",
author = "Bishop, {Dorothy V.M.} and Georgina Holt and Whitehouse, {Andrew J.O.} and Margriet Groen and Alessandro Tavano",
year = "2014",
doi = "10.7717/peerj.507",
language = "English",
volume = "2",
journal = "Peerj",
issn = "2167-8359",
publisher = "PeerJ Inc.",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - No population bias to left-hemisphere language in 4-year-olds with language impairment

AU - Bishop, Dorothy V.M.

AU - Holt, Georgina

AU - Whitehouse, Andrew J.O.

AU - Groen, Margriet

A2 - Tavano, Alessandro

PY - 2014

Y1 - 2014

N2 - Background. An apparent paradox in the field of neuropsychology is that people with atypical cerebral lateralization do not appear to suffer any cognitive disadvantage, yet atypical cerebral lateralization is more common in children and adults with developmental language disorders. This study was designed to explore possible reasons for this puzzling pattern of results. Methods. We used functional transcranial Doppler ultrasound (fTCD) to assess cerebral blood flow during language production in 57 four-year-olds, including 15 children who had been late-talkers when first seen at 20 months of age. We categorized cerebral lateralization as left, right or bilateral, and compared proportions with each type of laterality with those seen in a previously tested sample of children aged 6–16 years. We also compared language scores at 4 years for those with typical and atypical lateralization, and then looked at the association the opposite way: comparing those with typical or impaired language in terms of their cerebral lateralization. Results. The distribution of types of cerebral lateralization was similar for 4-year-olds to that seen in older children. Overall, cerebral lateralization was not predictive of language level. However, for children who had language difficulties at 20 months and/or 4 years (N = 21), there was no population bias to left-hemisphere language activation, whereas children without language problems at either age showed a pronounced bias to left-sided language lateralization. Nevertheless, many children with right hemisphere language had no indications of language difficulties, confirming that atypical cerebral asymmetry is not a direct cause of problems. Conclusions. We suggest that atypical lateralization at the individual level is not associated with language impairment. However, lack of lateralization at the population level is a marker of risk for language impairment, which could be due to genetic or non-genetic causes.

AB - Background. An apparent paradox in the field of neuropsychology is that people with atypical cerebral lateralization do not appear to suffer any cognitive disadvantage, yet atypical cerebral lateralization is more common in children and adults with developmental language disorders. This study was designed to explore possible reasons for this puzzling pattern of results. Methods. We used functional transcranial Doppler ultrasound (fTCD) to assess cerebral blood flow during language production in 57 four-year-olds, including 15 children who had been late-talkers when first seen at 20 months of age. We categorized cerebral lateralization as left, right or bilateral, and compared proportions with each type of laterality with those seen in a previously tested sample of children aged 6–16 years. We also compared language scores at 4 years for those with typical and atypical lateralization, and then looked at the association the opposite way: comparing those with typical or impaired language in terms of their cerebral lateralization. Results. The distribution of types of cerebral lateralization was similar for 4-year-olds to that seen in older children. Overall, cerebral lateralization was not predictive of language level. However, for children who had language difficulties at 20 months and/or 4 years (N = 21), there was no population bias to left-hemisphere language activation, whereas children without language problems at either age showed a pronounced bias to left-sided language lateralization. Nevertheless, many children with right hemisphere language had no indications of language difficulties, confirming that atypical cerebral asymmetry is not a direct cause of problems. Conclusions. We suggest that atypical lateralization at the individual level is not associated with language impairment. However, lack of lateralization at the population level is a marker of risk for language impairment, which could be due to genetic or non-genetic causes.

KW - Language impairment

KW - Cerebral lateralization

KW - Transcranial functional Doppler ultrasound

KW - Child

KW - Asymmetry

U2 - 10.7717/peerj.507

DO - 10.7717/peerj.507

M3 - Journal article

VL - 2

JO - Peerj

JF - Peerj

SN - 2167-8359

M1 - e507

ER -