Frontiers in Psychology (Feb 2025)

A semantic strength and neural correlates in developmental dyslexia

  • Sladjana Lukic,
  • Sladjana Lukic,
  • Sladjana Lukic,
  • Fei Jiang,
  • Maria Luisa Mandelli,
  • Maria Luisa Mandelli,
  • Ting Qi,
  • Sarah M. Inkelis,
  • Sarah M. Inkelis,
  • Emily Rosenthal,
  • Emily Rosenthal,
  • Zachary Miller,
  • Zachary Miller,
  • Emma Wellman,
  • Emma Wellman,
  • Silvia A. Bunge,
  • Silvia A. Bunge,
  • Silvia A. Bunge,
  • Maria Luisa Gorno-Tempini,
  • Maria Luisa Gorno-Tempini,
  • Christa Watson Pereira,
  • Christa Watson Pereira

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2024.1405425
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15

Abstract

Read online

IntroductionMost studies of dyslexia focus on domains of impairment (e.g., reading and phonology, among others), but few examine possible strengths. In the present study, we investigated semantic fluency as a cognitive strength in English-speaking children with dyslexia aged 8–13.MethodsNinety-seven children with dyslexia completed tests of letter and semantic verbal fluency, standardized measures of reading and cognitive functions, and task-free resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging (rs-fMRI). First, we adjusted performance on semantic fluency by letter fluency and created a residual score that was used to separate participants into high (residual >0) or average (residual <0) semantic performance groups. We then employed a psycholinguistic clustering and switching approach to the semantic fluency task and performed dynamic task-free rs-fMRI connectivity analysis to reveal group differences in brain dynamics.ResultsHigh and average semantic fluency groups were well-matched on demographics and letter fluency but differed on their psycholinguistic patterns on the semantic fluency task. The high semantic fluency group, compared to the average semantic fluency group, produced a higher number of words within each cluster, a higher max cluster size, and a higher number of switches. Differential dynamic rs-fMRI connectivity (shorter average dwell time and greater brain state switches) was observed between the high and average groups in a large-scale bilateral frontal-temporal-occipital network.DiscussionThese data demonstrate that a subgroup of children with dyslexia perform above average on semantic fluency tasks and their performance is strongly linked to distinct psycholinguistic patterns and differences in a task-free resting-state brain network, which includes regions previously implicated in semantic processing. This work highlights that inter-individual differences should be taken into account in dyslexia and reveals a cognitive area of strength for some children with dyslexia that could be leveraged for reading interventions.

Keywords