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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Possible roles for fronto-striatal circuits in reading disorder.

TLDR
The authors found anatomical convergence between hyperactivation regions and regions supporting articulation, consistent with the proposed compensatory role of these regions, and low convergence with phonological and implicit sequence learning regions.
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This article is published in Neuroscience & Biobehavioral Reviews.The article was published on 2017-01-01 and is currently open access. It has received 63 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Sequence learning & Implicit learning.

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Brain Basis of Phonological Deficit in Dyslexia is Independent of IQ.

TL;DR: It is found that discrepant and nondiscrepant poor readers exhibited similar patterns of reduced activation in brain areas such as left parietotem temporal and occipitotemporal regions, indicating that, regardless of IQ, poor readers have similar kinds of reading difficulties in relation to phonological processing.
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Are there shared neural correlates between dyslexia and ADHD? A meta-analysis of voxel-based morphometry studies

TL;DR: The current study is the first to meta-analyze overlap between gray matter differences in dyslexia and ADHD, which is a critical step toward constructing a multi-level understanding of this comorbidity that spans the genetic, neural, and cognitive levels of analysis.
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Comorbidity of reading disabilities and ADHD: Structural and functional brain characteristics.

TL;DR: A combination of shared and distinctive brain alterations between the clinical groups was identified, supporting the multiple deficit model for ADHD, RD, and its comorbidity.
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The Neurobiology of Dyslexia.

TL;DR: Kearns, Devin M, Hancock, Roeland, Hoeft, Fumiko, Pugh, Kenneth R; Frost, Stephen J as discussed by the authors, and Pugh.
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The Functional Neuroanatomy of Letter-Speech Sound Integration and Its Relation to Brain Abnormalities in Developmental Dyslexia.

TL;DR: The neurobiological basis underlying LSS integration is compared with existing neurocognitive models of functional and structural brain abnormalities in developmental dyslexia—focusing on superior temporal and occipito-temporal (OT) key regions.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Hippocampal contribution to early and later stages of implicit motor sequence learning

TL;DR: Results suggest a strong involvement of the hippocampus in implicit motor sequence learning and a very extensive and bilateral neural network of parietal, temporal and frontal cortical areas (including SMA, pre-SMA) together with parts of the cerebellum and striatum were found to play a role during random visuo-motor task performance.
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Neuroimaging of Reading Intervention: A Systematic Review and Activation Likelihood Estimate Meta-Analysis

TL;DR: Though these findings should be interpreted with caution due to the small number of studies and the disparate methodologies used, this paper is an effort to synthesize across studies and to guide future exploration of neuroimaging and reading intervention.
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Procedural learning in schizophrenia: a functional magnetic resonance imaging investigation.

TL;DR: Functional magnetic resonance imaging during a blocked, periodic sequence-learning task with groups of healthy subjects and schizophrenic patients on conventional antipsychotics demonstrates the involvement of the striatum, cerebellum, thalamus, cingulate gyrus, precuneus, and sensorimotor regions in PL.
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Similar neural correlates for language and sequential learning: Evidence from event-related brain potentials

TL;DR: It is concluded that the same neural mechanisms may be recruited for both syntactic processing of linguistic stimuli and sequential learning of structured sequence patterns more generally.
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Neuropsychological deficits and neural dysfunction in familial dyslexia.

TL;DR: Both the anatomical and the functional study point out a deficit in the posterior areas of the reading network in familial dyslexia, which is often associated with deficits in verbal short-term memory, phonological awareness and automatization abilities.
Related Papers (5)
Frequently Asked Questions (1)
Q1. What are the contributions mentioned in the paper "Ossible roles for fronto-striatal circuits in reading disorder" ?

The authors review current evidence for the compensation hypothesis in RD and apply large-scale reverse inference to investigate anatomical overlap between hyperactivation regions and neural systems for articulation, phonological processing, implicit sequence learning. 

Trending Questions (1)
What is fronto-striatal circuits?

Fronto-striatal circuits refer to the neural pathways connecting the frontal cortex and the striatum, which are involved in various cognitive processes including reading.