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Review
. 2020 Jan 4:71:389-417.
doi: 10.1146/annurev-psych-122216-011555. Epub 2019 Jul 23.

The Neurocognition of Developmental Disorders of Language

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Review

The Neurocognition of Developmental Disorders of Language

Michael T Ullman et al. Annu Rev Psychol. .

Abstract

Developmental disorders of language include developmental language disorder, dyslexia, and motor-speech disorders such as articulation disorder and stuttering. These disorders have generally been explained by accounts that focus on their behavioral rather than neural characteristics; their processing rather than learning impairments; and each disorder separately rather than together, despite their commonalities and comorbidities. Here we update and review a unifying neurocognitive account-the Procedural circuit Deficit Hypothesis (PDH). The PDH posits that abnormalities of brain structures underlying procedural memory (learning and memory that rely on the basal ganglia and associated circuitry) can explain numerous brain and behavioral characteristics across learning and processing, in multiple disorders, including both commonalities and differences. We describe procedural memory, examine its role in various aspects of language, and then present the PDH and relevant evidence across language-related disorders. The PDH has substantial explanatory power, and both basic research and translational implications.

Keywords: articulation disorder; basal ganglia; childhood apraxia of speech; declarative memory; developmental language disorder; dyslexia; procedural circuit deficit hypothesis; procedural memory; specific language impairment; stuttering.

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