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Many scientific researchers have published numerous articles linking an abnormality in the cerebellum with dyslexia, dyspraxia, ADD and ADHD.
The term "Cerebellar Developmental Delay" was proposed by Professor Roderick Nicholson of Sheffield University in 1990, whereby he and his co workers considered the idea that an abnormality of the cerebellum was linked to a number of the common learning and behavioural disorders.
By Jeremy D. Schmahmann, August 2004.
Many diseases involve the cerebellum and produce ataxia, which is characterized by incoordination of balance, gait, extremity and eye movements, and dysarthria. Cerebellar lesions do not always manifest with ataxic motor syndromes, however. The cerebellar cognitive affective syndrome (CCAS) includes impairments in executive, visual-spatial, and linguistic abilities, with affective disturbance ranging from emotional blunting and depression to disinhibition and psychotic features. The cognitive and psychiatric components of the CCAS, together with the ataxic motor disability of cerebellar disorders, are conceptualized within the dysmetria of thought hypothesis.
By James M. Bower and Lawrence M. Parsons, Scientific American, August 2003.
"Cognitive neuroscientists using powerful new tools of brain imaging have found that the human cerebellum is active during a wide range of activities that are not directly related to movement. Sophisticated cognitive studies have also revealed that damage to specific areas ofthe cerebellum can cause unanticipated impairments in non motor processes, especially in how quickly and accurately people perceive sensory information."
There has been persistent uncertainty as to whether lesions of the cerebellum are associated with clinically significant disturbances of behavior and cognition. To address this question, 20 patients with diseases confined to the cerebellum were studied prospectively over a 7-year period and the nature and severity of the changes in neurological and mental function were evaluated.
Investigations performed over the last decade however, have demonstrated for the first time the organization and strength of the connections that link the cerebellum with areas of the cerebral cortex known to be concerned with higher order behavior rather than with motor control.
The purpose of this study was to explore whether there are white matter (WM) abnormalities in children with attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD).
The cerebellum is one of the most consistent locations for structural differences between dyslexic and control participants in imaging studies. This study may be the first to show that anomalies in a cerebellar-frontal circuit are associated with rapid automatic naming and the double-deficit subtype of dyslexia.
ADHD adults showed altered patterns of neural activity despite comparable performance on a verbal working memory task. These findings suggest that the cerebellum is involved in the pathophysiology of at least some cognitive deficits associated with ADHD and emphasize the need for additional research aimed at elucidating the role of the cerebellum in ADHD symptomatology.
To determine the specificity of cognitive impairments in patients with cerebellar degeneration (CD), the neuropsychological test performance of 31 CD patients was compared to that of 21 patients with Huntington's disease (HD) and 29 normal adults.
The volumetric reductions in cortical gray and white matter in subjects with ADHD are also present in their unaffected siblings, suggesting that they are related to an increased familial risk for the disorder.
Anatomic studies of boys with attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) have detected decreased volumes in total and frontal brain, basal ganglia, and cerebellar vermis.
The aim of this study is to examine cerebral gray (GM) and white (WM) matter abnormalities in a group of ADHD children using a voxel-based morphometry protocol.
There were no significant differences between the dyslexic and control participants on the balancing tasks or when the speed and accuracy of pointing were analysed separately. However, when the speed and accuracy of pointing were combined, the dyslexic participants showed poorer performance than the controls (p = 0.045).
The Phonological Processing Deficit (PPD) hypothesis remains the most influential theory to explain why some children fail to acquire appropriate reading skills. However, current research suggests that there may be other deficits operating, and that the phonological processing deficit may be just one manifestation of a deeper underlying anatomical syndrome that originates in the cerebellar or vestibular areas of the brain. Claims that exercise regimes or programs of vestibular stimulation may provide a 'cure' for developmental dyslexia (specific reading difficulties) prompt scepticism among the scientific community and raise concerns about the exploitation of vulnerable parents. The paper provides a review of research into the causes of specific reading difficulties at the behavioural, cognitive and biological level of explanation, and considers whether or not there is any theoretical basis for the use of exercise-based intervention programs.
Children with vestibular (inner ear) disorders and related postural disturbances constitute a large segment of the population described as learning disabled.
This article reports an extended case series of studies comparing performance of three age groups of dyslexic and matched controlled children on primitive skills. The dyslexic children showed defecits in most of the skills, with fundamental defecits (worse performance than reading age controls) on phonological skills, naming speed, bead threading on some balance tasks. Furthermore, there was no evidence of sub types of dyslexia, with all dyslexic cildren showing defecits in at least two skill modalities. The results, which have considerable theoretical and applied significance, demonstrate that the difficulties of dyslexic children are not limited to phonological skills.
Roderick I Nicholson and Angela J Fawcett
Published in Dyslexia Journal Vol 1, 1995 by John Wiley & Sons
Although the cerebellum has traditionally been regarded as a motor mechanism, recent behavioral evidence indicates that the human cerebellum is involved in a wider range of functions: in learning, in planning, in judging time, in some emotional and cognitive disorders such as autism, and in some normal mental activities such as the cognitive processing of words. This evidence suggests that the traditional view of cerebellar function now needs to be reassessed and enlarged to include nonmotor as well as motor functions in the human brain. Whereas the cerebellar connections to frontal motor areas enable the cerebellum to improve motor skills, cerebellar connections to adjacent association areas of the prefrontal cortex can enable the cerebellum to improve mental skills, and cerebellar connections to Broca's area can enable the cerebellum to improve language skills.
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