Crossroads in the Learning Brain: The Neural Overlap Between Arithmetic and Phonological Processing
Aymee Alvarez‐Rivero, Lien Peters, Marc F. Joanisse, Nadine Gaab, Daniel Ansari

TL;DR
This study finds that brain areas involved in reading and math overlap, especially in regions like the left frontal and temporal areas.
Contribution
The study provides direct neural evidence of overlap between phonological processing and arithmetic using both univariate and multivariate methods.
Findings
Significant neural overlap was found in the left inferior frontal and temporal gyri and the right posterior cerebellum in adults.
Pattern similarity analysis showed higher similarity between phonological processing and large arithmetic problems.
Children showed multiple overlapping clusters along the left frontal gyrus.
Abstract
Robust behavioral evidence suggests an association between reading and math performance. Moreover, previous neuroimaging evidence suggests that arithmetic fact retrieval is supported by similar areas along the perisylvian language network as those typically involved in phonological processing. However, the neural correlates of these abilities have been mostly studied in isolation, and therefore remains unclear whether these abilities recruit functionally overlapping brain areas. We addressed this question by using functional magnetic resonance imaging to measure brain activity during an arithmetic and a word rhyming task. We then used both a test of univariate overlap and a rigorous pattern similarity analysis to provide a more nuanced assessment of brain‐level associations across both domains. We identified clusters of significant overlap along the left inferior frontal gyrus, the left…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCognitive and developmental aspects of mathematical skills · Reading and Literacy Development · Neuroscience and Music Perception
