Frontiers in Psychology (Jun 2024)

Perinatal influences on academic achievement and the developing brain: a scoping systematic review

  • Deborah Schneider,
  • Deborah Schneider,
  • Florence Bouhali,
  • Caroline G. Richter,
  • Radu Costache,
  • Catalina Costache,
  • Kaitlyn Kirchhoffer,
  • Vatsa Sheth,
  • Ibo MacDonald,
  • Fumiko Hoeft,
  • Fumiko Hoeft,
  • Fumiko Hoeft

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2024.1352241
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15

Abstract

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Introduction and methodsIn this PRISMA-compliant systematic review, we identify and synthesize the findings of research in which neuroimaging and assessments of achievement have been used to examine the relationships among aspects of developmental programming, neurodevelopment, and achievement in reading and mathematics.ResultsForty-seven studies met inclusion criteria. The majority examined the impact of prematurity (n = 32) and prenatal alcohol exposure (n = 13). Several prematurity studies reported a positive correlation between white-matter integrity of callosal fibers and executive functioning and/or achievement, and white matter properties were consistently associated with cognitive and academic performance in preterm and full-term children. Volumetric studies reported positive associations between academic and cognitive abilities and white and gray matter volume in regions such as the insula, putamen, and prefrontal lobes. Functional MRI studies demonstrated increased right-hemispheric language processing among preterm children. Altered activation of the frontoparietal network related to numerical abilities was also reported. Prenatal alcohol exposure studies reported alterations in white matter microstructure linked to deficits in cognitive functioning and academic achievement, including mathematics, reading, and vocabulary skills. Volumetric studies reported reductions in cerebral, cerebellar, and subcortical gray matter volumes associated with decreased scores on measures of executive functioning, attention, working memory, and academic performance. Functional MRI studies demonstrated broad, diffuse activation, reduced activation in canonical regions, and increased activation in non-canonical regions during numeric tasks.DiscussionA preponderance of studies linked prematurity and prenatal alcohol exposure to altered neurodevelopmental processes and suboptimal academic achievement. Limitations and recommendations for future research are discussed.Systematic review registrationIdentifier: DOI 10.17605/OSF.IO/ZAN67.

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