Abstract

Developmental dyscalculia (DD) is a learning disability affecting the acquisition of numerical-arithmetical skills. Affected people show persistent deficits in number processing, which are associated with aberrant brain activation and structure. Reduced gray matter has been reported in DD for the parietal cortex including the intraparietal sulcus (IPS), but also the frontal and occipito-temporal cortex. Furthermore, dyscalculics show white matter differences for instance in the inferior (ILF) and superior longitudinal fasciculus (SLF). However, the longitudinal development of these structural differences is unknown. Therefore, our goal was to investigate the developmental trajectory of gray and white matter in children with and without DD. In this longitudinal study, neuropsychological measures and T1-weighted structural images were collected twice with an interval of 4 years from 13 children with DD (8.2–10.4 years) and 10 typically developing (TD) children (8.0–10.4 years). Voxel-wise estimation of gray and white matter volumes was assessed using voxel-based morphometry for longitudinal data. The present findings reveal for the first time that DD children show persistently reduced gray and white matter volumes over development. Reduced gray matter was found in the bilateral inferior parietal lobes including the IPS, supramarginal gyri, left precuneus, cuneus, right superior occipital gyrus, bilateral inferior and middle temporal gyri, and insula. White matter volumes were reduced in the bilateral ILF and SLF, inferior fronto-occipital fasciculus (IFOF), corticospinal tracts, and right anterior thalamic radiation (ATR). Behaviorally, children with DD performed significantly worse in various numerical tasks at baseline and follow-up, corroborating persistent deficits in number processing. The present results are in line with the literature showing that children with DD have reduced gray and white matter volumes in the numerical network. Our study further sheds light on the trajectory of brain development, revealing that these known structural differences in the long association fibers and the adjacent regions of the temporal- and frontoparietal cortex persist in dyscalculic children from childhood into adolescence. In conclusion, our results underscore that DD is a persistent learning disorder accompanied by deficits in number processing and reduced gray and white matter volumes in number related brain areas.

Highlights

  • Numbers and mathematics are omnipresent in our daily lives and their mastery is crucial to function effectively in our society

  • Developmental dyscalculia (DD) children showed decreased gray matter volumes in the bilateral inferior parietal lobe assigned to the IPS, the bilateral supramarginal gyri, the left precuneus, the left postcentral gyrus, and the right paracentral lobule compared to typically developing (TD) children

  • Differences were found in the left calcarine gyrus/cuneus, the left middle occipital gyrus (MOG), and the right superior occipital gyrus (SOG)

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Summary

Introduction

Numbers and mathematics are omnipresent in our daily lives and their mastery is crucial to function effectively in our society. Studies in children with DD reveal impairments in numerical magnitude processing and difficulties in the retrieval of arithmetical facts from memory, and in visuospatial memory or inhibition (Geary, 1993; Landerl et al, 2004; De Smedt et al, 2013; Szucs et al, 2013). These deficiencies have been linked to abnormalities in brain function and structure. Children with DD show aberrant activation of the numerical neural network (Price et al, 2007; Davis et al, 2009; Kucian et al, 2011; Ashkenazi et al, 2012) and abnormalities in different measures of brain structure (e.g., fractional anisotropy, cortical thickness, cortical surface area, gray and white brain volumes; Rykhlevskaia et al, 2009; Kucian et al, 2013; Ranpura et al, 2013)

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