Language capacities in autism spectrum disorders (ASD) range from normal scores on standardized language tests to absence
of functional language in a substantial minority of 30% of individuals with ASD. Due to practical difculties of scanning at
this severe end of the spectrum, insights from MRI are scarce. Here we used manual deterministic tractography to investigate, for the frst time, the integrity of the core white matter tracts defning the language connectivity network in non-verbal
ASD (nvASD): ...
Language capacities in autism spectrum disorders (ASD) range from normal scores on standardized language tests to absence
of functional language in a substantial minority of 30% of individuals with ASD. Due to practical difculties of scanning at
this severe end of the spectrum, insights from MRI are scarce. Here we used manual deterministic tractography to investigate, for the frst time, the integrity of the core white matter tracts defning the language connectivity network in non-verbal
ASD (nvASD): the three segments of the arcuate (AF), the inferior fronto-occipital (IFOF), the inferior longitudinal (ILF)
and the uncinate (UF) fasciculi, and the frontal aslant tract (FAT). A multiple case series of nine individuals with nvASD
were compared to matched individuals with verbal ASD (vASD) and typical development (TD). Bonferroni-corrected
repeated measure ANOVAs were performed separately for each tract—Hemisphere (2:Left/Right) × Group (3:TD/vASD/
nvASD). Main results revealed (i) a main efect of group consisting in a reduction in fractional anisotropy (FA) in the IFOF
in nvASD relative to TD; (ii) a main efect of group revealing lower values of radial difusivity (RD) in the long segment of
the AF in nvASD compared to vASD group; and (iii) a reduced volume in the left hemisphere of the UF when compared to
the right, in the vASD group only. These results do not replicate volumetric diferences of the dorsal language route previously observed in nvASD, and instead point to a disruption of the ventral language pathway, in line with semantic defcits
observed behaviourally in this group.
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