Abstract

Developmental language disorder (DLD) is characterised by difficulties in learning one's native language for no apparent reason. These language difficulties occur in 7% of children and are known to limit future academic and social achievement. Our understanding of the brain abnormalities associated with DLD is limited. Here, we used a simple four-minute verb generation task (children saw a picture of an object and were instructed to say an action that goes with that object) to test children between the ages of 10–15 years (DLD N = 50, typically developing N = 67). We also tested 26 children with poor language ability who did not meet our criteria for DLD. Contrary to our registered predictions, we found that children with DLD did not have (i) reduced activity in language relevant regions such as the left inferior frontal cortex; (ii) dysfunctional striatal activity during overt production; or (iii) a reduction in left-lateralised activity in frontal cortex. Indeed, performance of this simple language task evoked activity in children with DLD in the same regions and to a similar level as in typically developing children. Consistent with previous reports, we found sub-threshold group differences in the left inferior frontal gyrus and caudate nuclei, but only when analysis was limited to a subsample of the DLD group (N = 14) who had the poorest performance on the task. Additionally, we used a two-factor model to capture variation in all children studied (N = 143) on a range of neuropsychological tests and found that these language and verbal memory factors correlated with activity in different brain regions. Our findings indicate a lack of support for some neurological models of atypical language learning, such as the procedural deficit hypothesis or the atypical lateralization hypothesis, at least when using simple language tasks that children can perform. These results also emphasise the importance of controlling for and monitoring task performance.

Highlights

  • Verb generation norms were recently reported for a subset of Snodgrass and Vanderwart (Snodgrass and Vanderwart, 1980) pictures by Kurland and colleagues (2014)

  • Resulting images were binarized by assigning each voxel a 1 or 0 depending on whether the voxel exceeded the statistical voxel-wise threshold or not. These binary maps were summed across developmental language disorder (DLD) and typically developing participants and divided by the total in each group, to obtain an image showing the spatial consistency in activation across participants in each group separately

  • We examined whether there were typically developing (TD) vs. DLD group differences in brain activity in regions other than those assessed in the ROI analyses above

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Summary

Introduction

Verb generation norms were recently reported for a subset of Snodgrass and Vanderwart (Snodgrass and Vanderwart, 1980) pictures by Kurland and colleagues (2014). We chose twenty-four pictures on the basis of their high verb agreement across participants (>80%), (see https://osf.io/k5bfs/). Perfect verb agreement was not obtained for any of the pictures. Pictures were sourced from the Rossion and Pourtois dataset (Rossion and Pourtois, 2004), which are colourful versions of the Snodgrass and Vanderwart pictures, rather than black and white line drawings

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