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Lauren Blockmans
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Journal Articles
Publisher: Journals Gateway
Neurobiology of Language (2025) 6: nol_a_00158.
Published: 10 January 2025
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Abstract
View articletitled, Impact of COVID-19 School Closures on White Matter Plasticity in the Reading Network
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for article titled, Impact of COVID-19 School Closures on White Matter Plasticity in the Reading Network
During the COVID-19 pandemic, children worldwide experienced school closures. Several studies have detected a negative impact on reading-related skills in children who experienced these closures during the early stages of reading instruction, but the impact on the reading network in the brain has not been investigated. In the current longitudinal study in a sample of 162 Dutch-speaking children, we found a short-term effect in the growth of phonological awareness in children with COVID-19 school closures compared to children without school closures, but no long-term effects one year later. Similarly, we did not find a long-term effect on the longitudinal development of white matter connectivity in tracts implicated during early reading development. Together, these findings indicate that one year after school closures no effects on the development of phonological awareness and white matter are found, yet it remains an open question whether short-term effects on the reading network could have been present and/or whether other networks (e.g., psychosocial related networks) are potentially more affected.
Includes: Supplementary data
Journal Articles
Role of Family Risk and of Pre-Reading Auditory and Neurostructural Measures in Predicting Reading Outcome
Open AccessPublisher: Journals Gateway
Neurobiology of Language (2023) 4 (3): 474–500.
Published: 30 August 2023
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View articletitled, Role of Family Risk and of Pre-Reading Auditory and Neurostructural Measures in Predicting Reading Outcome
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for article titled, Role of Family Risk and of Pre-Reading Auditory and Neurostructural Measures in Predicting Reading Outcome
Some children who develop dyslexia show pre-reading auditory and speech processing difficulties. Furthermore, left auditory cortex structure might be related to family risk for dyslexia rather than to reading outcome. However, it remains unclear to what extent auditory and speech processing and auditory cortex structure mediate the relationship between family risk and reading. In the current longitudinal study, we investigated the role of family risk (measured using parental reading questionnaires) and of pre-reading auditory measures in predicting third grade word reading. We measured auditory and speech processing in 162 pre-readers varying in family risk. In 129 of them, we also acquired structural magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). We quantified surface area and duplication patterns of the bilateral transverse temporal gyri (TTG(s)), and surface area of the bilateral planum temporale (PT). We found effects of pre-reading auditory and speech processing, surface area of the left first TTG and of bilateral PT and of left TTG duplication pattern on later reading. Higher pre-reading values on these measures were predictive of better word reading. Although we also found some evidence for an effect of family risk on auditory and speech processing, these latter measures did not mediate the strong relationship between family risk and later reading. Our study shows the importance of pre-reading auditory and speech processing and of auditory cortex anatomy for later reading. A better understanding of such interrelations during reading development will facilitate early diagnosis and intervention, which can be especially important given the continuity of family risk in the general population.
Includes: Supplementary data