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Are numerical abilities determined at early age? A brain morphology study in children and adolescents with and without developmental dyscalculia

Simone Schwizer Ashkenazi, Margot Roëll, Ursina McCaskey, Arnaud Cachia, Grégoire Borst, Ruth Tuura, Karin Kucian

2024Developmental Cognitive Neuroscience15 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The intraparietal sulcus (IPS) has been associated with numerical processing. A recent study reported that the IPS sulcal pattern was associated with arithmetic and symbolic number abilities in children and adults. In the present study, we evaluated the link between numerical abilities and the IPS sulcal pattern in children with Developmental Dyscalculia (DD) and typically developing children (TD), extending previous analyses considering other sulcal features and the postcentral sulcus (PoCS). First, we confirm the longitudinal sulcal pattern stability of the IPS and the PoCS. Second, we found a lower proportion of left sectioned IPS and a higher proportion of a double-horizontal IPS shape bilaterally in DD compared to TD. Third, our analyses revealed that arithmetic is the only aspect of numerical processing that is significantly related to the IPS sulcal pattern (sectioned vs not sectioned), and that this relationship is specific to the left hemisphere. And last, correlation analyses of age and arithmetic in children without a sectioned left IPS indicate that although they may have an inherent disadvantage in numerical abilities, these may improve with age. Thus, our results indicate that only the left IPS sulcal pattern is related to numerical abilities and that other factors co-determine numerical abilities.

Topics & Concepts

Intraparietal sulcusPsychologyDyscalculiaSulcusDevelopmental psychologyAudiologyCognitive psychologyNeurosciencePosterior parietal cortexDyslexiaLawPolitical scienceMedicineReading (process)Cognitive and developmental aspects of mathematical skillsMathematics Education and Teaching TechniquesReading and Literacy Development