Litcius/Paper detail

Language difficulties are a shared risk factor for both reading disorder and mathematics disorder

Margaret J. Snowling, Kristina Moll, Charles Hulme

2020Journal of Experimental Child Psychology58 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Disorders of reading and mathematics co-occur at greater than chance rates, but they are often studied separately. This article reports the reading and arithmetic outcomes at 9 years of age from a longitudinal study of 224 children at high risk for dyslexia. Using a cutoff at the 10th centile, groups of children with reading disorder (RD), mathematics disorder (MD), and comorbid reading disorder and math disorder (RD&MD) were identified. The risk of these disorders was elevated in children selected in preschool with language difficulties or at family risk for dyslexia. There was a high degree of comorbidity between RD and MD, and many cases-particularly in the comorbid group-also reached the diagnostic threshold for developmental language disorder (DLD). On measures of language, phoneme awareness, rapid automatized naming (RAN) digits, and rated inattention, there was a stepwise pattern: RD > MD > RD&MD. Poor language was associated with each disorder and appears to be a cognitive risk factor for RD, MD, and RD&MD. These findings suggest that there are shared genetic risk factors operating for both RD and MD.

Topics & Concepts

PsychologyReading (process)Factor (programming language)Developmental psychologyCognitive psychologyLinguisticsPhilosophyComputer scienceProgramming languageCognitive and developmental aspects of mathematical skillsReading and Literacy DevelopmentChildren's Physical and Motor Development