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      Number development and developmental dyscalculia.

      1 ,
      Developmental medicine and child neurology
      Wiley

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          Abstract

          There is a growing consensus that the neuropsychological underpinnings of developmental dyscalculia (DD) are a genetically determined disorder of 'number sense', a term denoting the ability to represent and manipulate numerical magnitude nonverbally on an internal number line. However, this spatially-oriented number line develops during elementary school and requires additional cognitive components including working memory and number symbolization (language). Thus, there may be children with familial-genetic DD with deficits limited to number sense and others with DD and comorbidities such as language delay, dyslexia, or attention-deficit-hyperactivity disorder. This duality is supported by epidemiological data indicating that two-thirds of children with DD have comorbid conditions while one-third have pure DD. Clinically, they differ according to their profile of arithmetic difficulties. fMRI studies indicate that parietal areas (important for number functions), and frontal regions (dominant for executive working memory and attention functions), are under-activated in children with DD. A four-step developmental model that allows prediction of different pathways for DD is presented. The core-system representation of numerical magnitude (cardinality; step 1) provides the meaning of 'number', a precondition to acquiring linguistic (step 2), and Arabic (step 3) number symbols, while a growing working memory enables neuroplastic development of an expanding mental number line during school years (step 4). Therapeutic and educational interventions can be drawn from this model.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Dev Med Child Neurol
          Developmental medicine and child neurology
          Wiley
          0012-1622
          0012-1622
          Nov 2007
          : 49
          : 11
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Department of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, German Red Cross Hospitals, Berlin, Germany. vonaster@kjpd.unizh.ch
          Article
          DMCN868
          10.1111/j.1469-8749.2007.00868.x
          17979867
          9a7c387d-0623-49e5-87fb-179117e15d48
          History

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