Anatomically Distinct Regions in the Inferior Frontal Cortex Are Modulated by Task and Reading Skill

Hannah L. Stone, Jamie L. Mitchell, Mia Fuentes-Jimenez, Jasmine E. Tran, Jason D. Yeatman, Maya Yablonski

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

The inferior frontal cortex (IFC) is a critical region for reading and language. This part of the cortex is highly heterogeneous in its structural and functional organization and shows high variability across individuals. Despite decades of research, the relationship between specific IFC regions and reading skill remains unclear. To shed light on the function of IFC in reading, we aim to (1) characterize the functional landscape of text-selective responses in IFC, while accounting for interindividual variability, and (2) examine how text-selective regions in the IFC relate to reading proficiency. To this end, children with a wide range of reading ability (N = 66; age 7–14 years, 34 female, 32 male) completed functional MRI scans while performing two tasks on text and nontext visual stimuli. Importantly, both tasks do not explicitly require reading and can be performed on all visual stimuli. This design allows us to tease apart stimulus-driven responses from task-driven responses and examine where in IFC task and stimulus interact. We were able to identify three anatomically distinct, text-selective clusters of activation in the IFC, inferior frontal sulcus (IFS), and dorsal and ventral precentral gyrus (PrG). These three regions showed a strong task effect that was highly specific to text. Furthermore, text selectivity in the IFS and dorsal PrG was associated with reading proficiency, such that better readers showed higher selectivity to text. These findings suggest that text-selective regions in the IFC are sensitive to both stimulus and task and highlight the importance of this region for proficient reading.

Original languageEnglish
Article numbere1767242025
JournalJournal of Neuroscience
Volume45
Issue number19
Early online date24 Mar 2025
DOIs
StatePublished - 7 May 2025
Externally publishedYes

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
Copyright © 2025 the authors.

Keywords

  • dyslexia
  • inferior frontal cortex
  • reading
  • task effects
  • text selectivity
  • visual processing

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