Reading and White Matter Development: A Systematic Review of Neuroplastic Changes in Literacy
Abstract
1. Introduction
- which white matter pathways are consistently implicated across studies;
- how reading-related brain changes differ across developmental stages (e.g., preschool vs. adolescence);
- how these patterns vary between typically developing children and those with reading difficulties such as dyslexia.
1.1. Reading Habits
1.2. Reading Skills
2. Methods
2.1. Review Framework and Search Strategy
2.2. Inclusion and Exclusion Criteria
2.3. Data Extraction and Analysis
2.4. Study Selection Process
2.5. Study Grouping
3. Results
Authors | Study Group | N: | Measures | Results | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Deutsch et al., 2005 [49] | Fourteen children aged 7–13 years | 14 | FA and CI in white matter tracts; reading, spelling, and rapid naming skills | Lower FA and CI in left temporo-parietal pathways linked to poorer reading, spelling, and naming, supporting white matter’s role. |
2 | Beaulieu et al., 2005 [34] | Children aged 8–12 years | 32 | DTI (FA in left temporo-parietal white matter); word identification (WRMT-R) | Higher FA in left temporo-parietal white matter correlates with better reading (Word ID), with the strongest correlation in the posterior internal capsule. |
3 | Niogi and McCandliss, 2006 [50] | Thirty-one children (6.5–10.3 years), including RD (reading disability) and non-impaired groups | 31 | FA in left SCR, CS, ACR; word ID, word attack, lateralization index | Higher FA in left SCR and CS correlated with better reading skills. RD group showed right lateralization, linked to poorer reading scores |
4 | Leonard et al., 2006 [51] | Children with DD, SLI, and mixed profiles (ages 11–16) | 22 | Structural MRI; anatomical risk index based on volumetric asymmetry, reading and comprehension assessments | Children with more symmetrical brain structures had severe comprehension deficits (SLI-like), while those with more leftward asymmetry had decoding impairments but preserved comprehension (DD-like). Anatomical profile predicted reading/differentiation patterns. |
5 | Dougherty et al., 2007 [35] | Children aged 7–12 with a range of reading abilities | 49 | DTI; FA and radial diffusivity in seven corpus callosum segments; phonological awareness (CTOPP), reading measures (WJ-III) | Higher phonological awareness was significantly associated with increased radial diffusivity and lower FA in the temporal-callosal segment. Suggests better readers have fewer but larger axons, indicating reduced interhemispheric connectivity may support reading. |
6 | Cao et al., 2008 [52] | Children with and without reading difficulties (8.9–14.11 years) | 24 | fMRI, Dynamic Causal Modeling (DCM), rhyming task | Children with reading difficulties showed weaker modulatory connectivity between left fusiform and parietal regions, especially on trials with conflicting phonological and orthographic cues. Reading skill was correlated with several connectivity patterns only in typical readers. |
7 | Odegard et al., 2009 [53] | Children with and without dyslexia (10–14 y/o) | 17 | DTI (FA); WIAT-II (real word), DST (pseudoword decoding) | FA in left superior corona radiata and other tracts correlated with decoding; overlap found for real and pseudoword skills. Negative correlation in corpus callosum. |
8 | Andrews et al., 2010 [33] | Preterm (mean age 11.9 ± 1.8 years) and term children (mean age 12.7 ± 2.5 years) | 28 | DTI (FA in corpus callosum and temporo-parietal region;, reading skills (WJ-III subtests) | Preterm children had lower reading scores and FA values in corpus callosum. FA in the body of corpus callosum correlated significantly with reading scores. |
9 | Rimrodt et al., 2010 [31] | Children with and without dyslexia, aged 7–16 | 31 | DTI (FA, PDD); TOWRE (reading fluency), WJ-III (word ID, word attack), tractography of perisylvian network | Lower FA in LIFG and temporo-parietal WM in dyslexia; FA positively correlated with reading fluency; differences linked to fiber orientation and tract overlap. |
10 | Frye et al., 2011 [54] | Adolescents (~16 y), born at term and preterm | 32 | DTI (FA, RD, SLF volume); letter–word ID, phoneme reversal, word attack | FA and RD in left SLF significantly correlated with reading measures; SLF volume linked to reading only in preterm-born group. |
11 | Yeatman et al., 2011 [40] | Children aged 7–11 years | 55 | DTI (FA, RD in AF); phonological awareness, memory, and word reading | Higher FA in the left AF correlated with better phonological awareness and memory, with left-lateralized volume predicting reading skills. |
12 | Raschle et al., 2011 [55] | Pre-reading children with (FHD+) and without (FHD−) familial risk for dyslexia | 20 | VBM, RAN; family history, gray matter volume | Reduced GMV in left occipitotemporal and parietotemporal regions in children at risk; positive correlation between GMV and rapid automatized naming. |
13 | Feldman et al., 2012 [56] | Forty-two children (23 preterm, 19 full-term), aged 9–16 years | 42 | FA in corpus callosum, AF, SLF; verbal IQ, syntactic comprehension, decoding, and reading comprehension | Preterm group showed FA correlations with language and reading in ventral and dorsal tracts; no such links in full-term group. |
14 | Saygin et al., 2013 [13] | Pre-readers and early readers (Kindergarten children, aged ~5 years) | 40 | Diffusion MRI (FA, volume in AF, ILF, SLFp); CTOPP, WRMT-R, and RAN | Phonological awareness correlated with FA and volume in left AF; no link to RAN or letter knowledge. |
15 | Gullick and Booth, 2015 [37] | Children aged 8–14 years | 47 | DTI (FA in AF), fMRI (pSTS activity), word reading (rhyme judgment) | Better reading skills and cross-modal task performance linked to higher FA in left arcuate fasciculus, with pSTS activity predicting AF integrity. |
16 | Myers et al., 2014 [57] | 38 children aged 5–6 years at baseline, followed until Grade 3 | 38 | WM volume changes; reading skills | Left dorsal WM growth (such as, AF) predicted Grade 3 reading outcomes, beyond familial, env., and pre-literacy factors. |
17 | Horowitz-Kraus et al., 2014 [58] | Typically developing adolescents aged 15–19 years | 21 | DTI (FA in arcuate fasciculus and inferior longitudinal fasciculus); TOWRE-II (sight word efficiency), WJ-III (passage comprehension) | Right ILF was associated with word reading efficiency; left ILF and bilateral AF, especially right AF, were associated with reading comprehension. Findings support the Simple View of Reading, indicating distinct white matter correlates for word- and sentence-level reading. |
18 | Broce et al., 2015 [59] | Typically developing children (ages 5–8) | 19 | DWI (FA in arcuate fasciculus [segments] and frontal aslant tract); CELF-4 receptive language, | FA in bilateral AF predicted expressive and receptive language; FA in left AF increased with age; left FAT length predicted receptive language scores. |
19 | Skeide et al., 2015 [32] | Children aged 9–12 years | 50 | Phonological awareness, spelling DTI (FA of arcuate fasciculus), rs-fMRI | Genetic variant rs11100040 was associated with functional and structural connectivity (arcuate fasciculus FA) between phonological regions. Structural connectivity was linked to phonological awareness, which in turn predicted spelling and dyslexia risk scores. |
20 | Travis et al., 2015 [26] | Forty-five children and adolescents (9–17 years) | 45 | FA in cerebellar peduncles (SCP, MCP, ICP); decoding, reading comprehension | FA in MCP positively correlated with decoding and comprehension; left SCP and ICP showed negative correlations. |
21 | Richards et al., 2015 [30] | Grades 4–9: dysgraphia (n = 14), dyslexia (n = 17), controls (n = 9) | 40 | DTI (FA, RA, AD); fMRI during writing; spelling, alphabet, planning, resting state | WM integrity (FA, RA, AD) higher in controls; dyslexia and dysgraphia showed distinct WM–fMRI connectivity patterns during writing tasks. |
22 | Gullick et al., 2016 [38] | Typically developing children, SES stratified | 42 | DTI (FA in ILF, SLF, CST); real-word reading scores, SES | High SES: left ILF/SLF FA correlated with reading. Low SES: right ILF FA correlated with reading, suggesting divergent neural strategies. |
23 | Travis et al., 2016 [60] | Forty-two children (5.8–6.8 years), 31 Readers, 11 Pre-readers | 42 | FA in white matter; phonological awareness, language, and pseudoword decoding | Readers had higher FA in left aSLF and right UF; aSLF-L linked to phonological awareness, UF-R to language skills. |
24 | Borst et al., 2016 [61] | Typically developing children aged 9–10 years | 16 | Anatomical MRI (sulcal morphology of left and right OTS); oral reading (Alouette-R test) | Left OTS sulcal pattern predicted reading accuracy; interrupted OTS linked to better word reading. |
25 | Travis et al., 2017 [62] | Six-year-old children (readers and pre-readers) | 42 | Cross-sectional, FA in white matter tracts (e.g., left anterior SLF, right UF); reading skills, phonological awareness, language skills | Readers had higher FA compared to pre-readers; FA significantly correlated with phonological awareness and language skills. |
26 | De Moura et al., 2016 [48] | Forty children aged 8–12 years: 17 poor readers, 23 good readers | 40 | FA in AF, ILF, cingulum; word-level reading ability | Poor readers had lower FA in bilateral white matter tracts, indicating reduced fiber coherence. |
27 | Mürner-Lavanchy et al., 2018 [63] | Very preterm (VPT) and term-born children, age 7 | 178 | DTI (FA, RD, MD), NODDI (axon density), TBSS, arcuate fasciculus tractography; language tests (semantics, grammar, phonological awareness) | Higher FA and axon density, and lower RD, AD, MD were associated with better performance in semantics, grammar, and phonological awareness in both groups. |
28 | Sun et al., 2017 [64] | Children with variable reading skills | 66 | ROBO1 genotyping, DTI (FA in corpus callosum); word-list reading. | ROBO1 polymorphisms influence reading via FA in the genu of the corpus callosum; genu FA mediates gene-to-reading effect. |
29 | Arrington et al., 2017 [24] | School-aged children with typical or poor decoding skills | 76 | Reading accuracy, fluency, comprehension, and white matter integrity (FA values) | White matter integrity in SLF, ILF, and UF correlated with reading; poor readers showed distinct tract reliance. |
30 | Horowitz-Kraus et al., 2017 [65] | Adolescents with mood or behavioral disorders and controls (11–17 y) | 39 | DTI (FA); CTOPP (phonemic awareness), WJ-III (orthographic processing, reading comprehension) | Reading skills correlated with FA in AF, ILF, SLF, IFOF; mood disorders showed lower comprehension and phonological scores and altered WM–reading associations. |
31 | Wang et al., 2017 [66] | Seventy-eight children (5–12 years) | 78 | FA, RD, and AD in AF, SLF, ILF; reading fluency, phonological awareness, and familial risk | FHD+ children had lower FA and atypical left AF lateralization; faster FA growth in right SLF aided compensation in good readers. |
32 | Su et al., 2018 [41] | Forty Chinese children (18 with dyslexia, 22 controls), mean age 11.1 years | 40 | FA in left AF (dorsal) and left ILF (ventral), phonological, morphological, and orthographic processing skills | Reduced FA in left AF linked to phonological deficits and in left ILF to morphological deficits, showing dual-pathway disruption. |
33 | Su et al., 2018 [67] | Chinese children (longitudinal, ages 4–14) | 79 | Vocabulary development (ages 4–10); DTI at age 14 (FA in arcuate fasciculus) | Children with consistently poor vocabulary growth showed significantly reduced FA in the left arcuate fasciculus, particularly in the posterior and direct segments. Vocabulary growth rate was a significant predictor of FA, independent of initial vocabulary level. |
34 | Lou et al., 2019 [46] | Children with developmental dyslexia (n = 26) and age-matched controls (n = 31) | 57 | Net. metrics (clustering, efficiency), literacy skills (reading, phonemes) | Dyslexic children had reduced left occipito-temporo-parietal connectivity, correlating with literacy skills beyond known abnormalities. |
35 | Banfi et al., 2019 [68] | Children with dyslexia, isolated spelling deficits, and typical peers (Grade 3) | 69 | DTI (FA via AFQ); SLRT-II (word and pseudoword reading), spelling test, PA, RAN, IQ | Dyslexia group showed higher FA in bilateral ILF and right SLF; FA in right ILF negatively correlated with reading; left AF FA correlated with spelling in SD group. |
36 | Huber et al., 2019 [69] | Children aged 7–12 with varied reading skills | 53 | DTI, WMTI, NODDI, Woodcock–Johnson basic reading composite | AWF and ICVF in posterior corpus callosum correlated significantly with reading skill; results robust after controlling for age and motion. |
37 | Dubner et al., 2019 [70] | Preterm with inflammation (PT+), preterm without inflammation (PT−), full-term (FT) | 78 | FA and MD in 7 corpus callosum segments; WRMT-III (reading), WASI-II (IQ), BRIEF (executive function) | Reading correlated with occipital FA (r = 0.32, p < 0.01); PT+ group had lower FA and higher MD in multiple callosal segments compared to PT and FT groups. |
38 | Broce et al., 2019 [71] | Typically developing children (5–8 y/o) | 60 | DTI (FA in AF, ILF, IFOF, VOF); phonological awareness; decoding | FA in AF, ILF, and VOF predicted early literacy skills; VOF newly identified as relevant for early reading development. |
39 | Del Tufo et al., 2019 [72] | Children with early expressive language delay | 340 | Reading/listening comprehension tests (e.g., QRI, WJ-PC), expressive language milestones, FA of left ILF (DTI) | Later expressive language milestones predicted poorer comprehension. Left ILF moderated the relationship. Early intervention reduced the risk of poor comprehension by 39% in at-risk children. |
40 | Vanderauwera et al., 2019 [73] | Adolescents aged 13–14, wide range of reading skills | 34 | DTI (FA, AD, RD), word and pseudoword fluency tests (Een-minuut-Test, Klepel), SES via paternal education | FA in left long AF and UF positively associated with word reading; SES also linked to FA and reading skills, suggesting environmental effects. |
41 | De Vos et al., 2020 [74] | Typically developing pre-readers | 59 | DTI (FA in left AF); auditory steady-state response, phonological awareness tasks | Rightward lateralization of 4Hz syllable-rate processing associated with higher FA in left AF; both predicted better phonological processing. |
42 | Beaulieu et al., 2020 [75] | Children and adolescents (aged 10–18 years) | 20 | myelin water fraction (MWF) imaging; standardized reading tests | Lower MWF in poor readers in corpus callosum, thalamus, and internal capsule; MWF positively correlated with reading scores. |
43 | Geeraert et al., 2020 [76] | Typically developing children aged 6–16 years | 46 | DTI, neurite orientation dispersion and NODDI, magnetization transfer imaging | White matter microstructure developed with age but showed no direct link to reading skills. |
44 | Hutton et al., 2020 [77] | Preschoolers aged 3–5, typical development | 47 | DTI (FA, AD, RD, MD); StimQ-P2 READ (HLE), EVT-2, GRTR, TRH, CTOPP-2 RAN | Higher HLE scores associated with lower AD, RD, MD in AF, ILF, UF; book reading quantity linked to higher FA and better emergent literacy skills. |
45 | Bruckert et al., 2020 [78] | Twenty-three children, aged 8 years (mean age = 8.2, 12 male) | 23 | FA and R1 in SCP, MCP, and ICP; word reading efficiency | Reading efficiency negatively correlated with FA in SCPs; no R1 link, suggesting non-myelin factors influence FA-reading associations. |
46 | Zhao et al., 2021 [79] | Ninety-six children aged 8–12 years, | 96 | FA in AF, SLF, corpus callosum, cerebellar tracts; phonological and reading fluency | Dyslexia linked to reduced left AF and SLF connectivity; better reading correlated with stronger corpus callosum and cerebellar pathways. |
47 | Lou et al., 2021 [80] | Children with and without reading disabilities | 64 | DTI, whole-brain connectome; feeder connection strength, word reading efficiency, phonemic decoding | Feeder connections between hubs and non-hubs significantly correlated with word reading efficiency and phonemic decoding; effects stronger in girls. |
48 | Van Der Auwera et al., 2021 [81] | Children with and without dyslexia; three time points (pre-, early-, and advanced-reading stages) | 52 | DTI; word and pseudoword reading (Grades 2–5), phonological awareness | FA in left arcuate fasciculus was lower in pre-readers who developed dyslexia and predicted later word and pseudoword reading skills. |
49 | Zuk et al., 2021 [82] | At-risk children followed from Kindergarten to Grade 2 | 74 | DTI (FA in posterior right SLF); TOWRE-2, WRMT-III, SES, phonological awareness, speech accuracy | Higher FA in right posterior SLF predicted better decoding in at-risk children. SES, speech accuracy, and PA also predicted successful reading outcomes. |
50 | Wang et al., 2021 [83] | Typically developing children (n = 22) and children with reading difficulties (n = 24), aged ~9 years | 46 | Diffusion spectrum imaging; reading comprehension test, Chinese character recognition test | RD group showed reduced white matter integrity (GFA, NQA); reading comprehension and character recognition linked to corpus callosum indices. |
51 | Liu et al., 2021 [79] | Children aged 9–14 with and without dyslexia | 57 | DTI-based graph analysis (FA in right fusiform gyrus); word and pseudoword reading accuracy, spelling | In children with dyslexia, higher FA in the right fusiform gyrus was negatively correlated with reading accuracy, suggesting maladaptive compensation. |
52 | Koirala et al., 2021 [84] | Children aged 6–16 (typical and struggling readers) | 412 | DWI (NODDI: ODI, NDI); single word reading, phonological processing | Lower ODI and NDI associated with better reading and phonological processing; phonological processing mediated the WM–reading relationship. |
53 | Yu et al., 2022 [85] | Adolescents with PAE (FAS/PFAS, HE), controls | 74 | DTI (ILF lateralization, FA), fMRI; phonological processing, reading | FAS/PFAS group showed rightward ILF lateralization and increased right hemisphere activation; HE group showed weaker left ILF–reading correlations. |
54 | Gao et al., 2022 [36] | Chinese–English bilingual children, aged 8.2–12 | 40 | DTI (FA in left/right arcuate fasciculus); English and Chinese reading tests, phonological awareness, visual–spatial ability | English reading was associated with FA in left AF (especially caudal nodes, correlated with phonological awareness); Chinese reading was associated with FA in right AF (correlated with visual-spatial ability). Findings support both language-universal and language-specific white matter mechanisms. |
55 | Liu et al., 2022 [27] | Fifty-seven children (9–14 years), including 26 with dyslexia and 31 matched controls | 57 | FA values in right fusiform gyrus (FFG); reading accuracy, pseudoword reading, spelling accuracy | Higher FA in the right FFG negatively correlated with word and pseudoword reading accuracy in dyslexic children, suggesting maladaptive compensation. |
56 | Meisler and Gabrieli, 2022 [39] | Children and adolescents (6–18 years) | 983 | Diffusion MRI (FDC, FD, FC metrics); word-reading efficiency test (TOWRE) | Higher FDC in left temporo-parietal white matter correlated with better reading; no differences between reading-disabled and typical groups. |
57 | Meisler and Gabrieli, 2022 [86] | Six hundred and eighty-six children aged 5–18 years, with and without reading disabilities | 686 | FA values in white matter tracts; TOWRE composite scores (SWE and PDE) | No significant FA differences in groups. Positive FA associations with nonword reading in older children (9+), particularly in right SLF and left ICP. |
58 | Brignoni-Pérez et al., 2021 [45] | Children born full-term (FT) and preterm (PT), average age: 8 | 79 | Oral reading index, FA from dMRI, R1 metric from qT1 relaxometry | FT: Reading correlated with FA in dorsal tracts; PT: reading correlated with R1 in dorsal and ventral tracts. |
59 | Ostertag et al., 2023 [87] | Children with and without prenatal alcohol exposure, age 5 | 57 | DTI (FA, AD in arcuate fasciculus); NEPSY-II (speeded naming, phonological processing), vocabulary | In PAE children, greater FA in right AF predicted better speeded naming; higher AD in left AF was linked to better phonological processing. No such associations were found in controls. Indicates altered white matter–language function relationships in PAE. |
60 | Harriott et al., 2023 [88] | Children with NF1 (M = 12.5 years) | 28 | Word reading, phonological awareness, visuospatial skills; MRI (T2/FLAIR UBO volume); | Total UBO volume significantly predicted word reading and phonological awareness, even when controlling for age, sex, scanner, and PIQ. |
61 | Zhao et al., 2023 [42] | Children with developmental dyslexia and age-matched controls | 57 | high-angular diffusion imaging (HARDI), spherical deconvolution tractography, HMOA in AF segments; reading accuracy (words, nonwords, meaningless text) | Lateralization index (LI) of AFAS correlated with nonword and meaningless text reading; LI of AFLS correlated with word reading. Findings suggest segment-specific compensatory lateralization in dyslexia. |
62 | Vandecruys et al., 2024 [89] | Typically developing preschoolers (mean age ≈ 5.6 years) | 56 | DWI; phonological awareness, letter knowledge; tracts: bilateral IFOF, ILF, anterior and direct arcuate fasciculus | Bilateral IFOF microstructure was associated with both reading and math precursors; associations were shared, not specific to reading alone. |
63 | Ghasoub et al., 2024 [90] | Typically developing children (ages 2–6) | 81 | Diffusion MRI; graph-theory analysis, NEPSY-II phonological processing, and speeded naming | Phonological processing scores positively associated with efficiency and clustering in reading-language structural networks, especially right hemisphere. |
64 | Cross et al., 2023 [91] | Sixty-five children aged 8–14 years | 65 | DTI (FA in AF, ILF, IFOF, uncinate fasciculus); single word reading, decoding, comprehension, rapid naming tasks | Higher FA in left AF associated with better decoding efficiency; higher FA in left IFOF positively linked with reading comprehension; greater FA in right ILF and bilateral uncinate fasciculus negatively correlated with reading comprehension and rapid naming skills |
Authors | Study Group | N: | Measures | Results | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Hoeft et al., 2011 [95] | Children with and without dyslexia (6–12 y/o) | 45 | DTI (right SLF); fMRI during phonological task; reading assessments over 2.5 years | WM organization in right SLF predicted long-term reading gains in dyslexia; behavioral predictors alone were not sufficient. |
2 | Yeatman et al., 2012 [4] | 55 children, aged 7–15 years (39 with at least 3 measurements) | 55 | FA in left AF and ILF; standardized reading scores | Above-average readers had low initial FA that increased over time; below-average readers had high initial FA that declined, reflecting differing developmental trajectories. |
3 | Gullick and Booth, 2015 [37] | Children aged 8–14 years | 30 | Diffusion MRI (FA in AF); reading assessments (real-word reading, pseudoword reading) | Higher FA in the direct segment of the AF at baseline was predictive of greater improvements in reading skills over a three-year period. |
4 | Kraft et al., 2016 [96] | Pre-reading children with and without family risk of DD; followed into Grade 1 or 2 | 53 | Quantitative T1 MRI (left anterior AF); behavioral literacy precursors (phonological representations, RAN); reading/spelling tests (SLRT-II, ELFE, DERET) | Increased T1 intensity (↓ myelin) in left anterior AF in risk group. Neuroanatomical predictor model (incl. AF) predicted DD better (80%) than behavioral-only model (63%). T1 of left anterior AF was significant predictor of later DD. |
5 | Takeuchi et al., 2016 [2] | Healthy Japanese children | 296 | FA; verbal comprehension scores (WAIS-III, WISC-III) | Stronger reading habits increased FA in left AF, IFOF, PCR. |
6 | Vandermosten et al., 2017 [44] | Pre-readers (Kindergarten children aged ~5–6) | 71 | Diffusion MRI (FA of IFOF and AF); cognitive reading precursors (PA, RAN), parental reading data | Paternal reading skills mediate early childhood reading outcomes via left IFOF, SES impacts white matter structure. |
7 | Vanderauwera et al., 2018 [97] | 61 children: pre-reading stage (5–6 years) and early reading stage (7–8 years) | 61 | FA in ventral pathways (IFOF, ILF, UF); phonological awareness, orthographic knowledge | Left IFOF supported orthographic knowledge at early stages of reading. No ventral pathways supported phonological processes. |
8 | Huber et al., 2018 [98] | Struggling grade-school readers (ages 7–12) | 24 | Diffusion MRI (white matter metrics); reading assessments (Woodcock–Johnson, TOWRE) | Significant improvement in reading skills and widespread white matter changes over 8-week intervention. |
9 | Richards et al., 2018 [99] | Dyslexia (n = 20), OWL LD (n = 6), dysgraphia (n = 10), typical readers (n = 6); Grades 4–9 | 42 | DTI (AD, MD), fMRI clustering coefficient; word, sentence, and text-level silent reading tasks pre/post 18 computerized lessons | WM–GM correlations emerged post-instruction only: (1) AD in left superior frontal ↔ right IFG (word reading); (2) MD in left superior corona radiata ↔ left MFG (sentence); (3) MD in left anterior corona radiata ↔ right MFG (text). Reading gains observed behaviorally. |
10 | Bruckert et al., 2019 [100] | Seventy-one children: 34 preterm (PT) and 37 full-term (FT), aged 6–8 years | 71 | FA in AF, SLF, ICP; phonological awareness, language, reading fluency | FA in dorsal and cerebellar pathways predicted reading outcomes in FT but not in PT children, suggesting distinct neural adaptations in PT group. |
11 | Lebel et al., 2018 [47] | Children (9.5 ± 1.3 years) | 70 | FA and MD in white matter tracts; reading fluency, phonological decoding, and sight word reading | FA increased with age in non-impaired readers, absent in dysfluent readers. Faster MD decreases in dysfluent inaccurate readers suggest compensatory changes (e.g., corona radiata, uncinate). |
12 | Borchers et al., 2019 [101] | Typically developing children aged 6–8 years | 37 | Diffusion MRI (FA in left and right SLF, left Arcuate, left ICP); cognitive assessments (language, phonological awareness) | White matter properties (FA) at age 6 in specific pathways (SLF, Arcuate, ICP) predict reading outcomes at age 8, beyond pre-literacy skills and demographic factors. |
13 | Su et al., 2020 [16] | Seventy-nine children; language and reading assessments from aged 1–14 years; | 79 | FA in AF, IFOF; early family factors (SES, literacy exposure), vocabulary growth rate | Earlier literacy exposure and SES correlated with higher FA in left AF and IFOF. Vocabulary growth rate predicted FA in left AF-posterior and AF-direct. |
14 | Partanen et al., 2020 [102] | 87 children: 46 dyslexic, 41 average readers; aged 8–12 years | 87 | FA and MD in white matter tracts; voxel-based analysis of gray matter, reading fluency | Changes in white matter microstructure (lower MD) in right-hemisphere predicted reading fluency improvement. Gray matter showed no significant associations |
15 | Phan et al., 2021 [103] | Children aged 6–10 (typical and dyslexic readers) | 41 | Longitudinal T1 MRI (PBVC + scaling); reading assessments (word reading, pseudoword reading) | Cortical volume in the left reading network (temporo-parietal regions) increased during early reading stages and stabilized later. Dyslexic readers showed compensatory mechanisms in the right-hemisphere (right pars opercularis and isthmus cingulate). |
16 | Brignoni-Pérez et al., 2021 [45] | Very preterm infants (24–31 weeks GA), randomized to maternal speech vs. control | 42 | DTI (FA, MD) at 36 weeks PMA and 12 months AA; language via MacArthur–Bates CDI at 12–18 months AA | Infants exposed to increased maternal speech showed enhanced white matter development and higher language scores. |
17 | Zhou et al., 2022 [92] | Preschool children aged 2–7 years | 73 | DTI (FA, MD); phonological processing raw score, rapid naming scores | Increased FA in internal capsule and IFOF correlated with phonological processing ability; mediation analysis showed age-related changes in FA supported phonological skill development. |
18 | Beelen et al., 2022 [104] | Children aged 8–11 (grades 2 and 5) | 43 | Structural MRI (left fusiform gyrus size); reading skills (word and pseudoword reading tasks) | Early reading skills (grade 2) predicted an increase in the size of the left fusiform gyrus by grade 5. However, the size of the left fusiform gyrus in grade 2 did not predict later reading skills, indicating behavior-driven brain plasticity. |
19 | Manning et al., 2022 [94] | Preschool children aged 3.5–4.5 years | 35 | Diffusion MRI (FA, RD, AD in SLF), resting-state fMRI (functional connectivity); pre-reading skills (NEPSY-II speeded naming, phonological processing) | Structural features in SLF and functional connectivity in fronto-parietal networks at 3.5 years predicted better pre-reading skills (phonological processing, speeded naming) at 4.5 years. |
20 | Weiss et al., 2022 [43] | Fifty-three children; subset of 20 underwent MRI at 2 years | 53 | Parent–child conversational turns; FA and MPF in AF, SLF; letter knowledge and phonological awareness | Parent and conversational turns at 14 months correlated with literacy skills at 5 years. AF myelination mediated the relationship between early language input and literacy. |
21 | Davison et al., 2023 [105] | Children aged 5–10 (PLING cohort) | 77 | DTI (FA); left/right AF and SLF; lateralization index, parent-reported shared reading, standardized reading and language tests (TOWRE-2, GORT-5, PPVT-4, CELF-5) | More shared reading in Kindergarten was linked to greater FA and left-lateralized SLF, which predicted better word reading fluency in Grade 2. |
22 | Ghasoub et al., 2024 [106] | Children aged 3–7 with and without prenatal alcohol exposure (PAE); repeated DTI scans | 135 | DTI (graph theory metrics in reading network), NEPSY-II phonological processing and speeded naming | Children with PAE had lower pre-reading scores and lower graph theory metrics (global efficiency, nodal degree). PAE moderated brain–behavior associations: stronger links between phonological processing and network efficiency in PAE group. |
23 | Lou et al., 2024 [107] | Children aged 8–14 with and without reading disabilities | 64 | Diffusion-weighted MRI, connectome-based graph theory analysis of left thalamus; TOWRE-PDE (phonemic decoding), RAN (rapid automatized naming), SWE (sight word efficiency), reading comprehension | Transmission cost of the left thalamus (in reading network) was positively correlated with phonemic decoding. Local efficiency and clustering coefficient were negatively correlated with RAN. Stronger pulvinar and mediodorsal thalamic nucleus connections to temporal areas were negatively associated with decoding. Results were replicated in a validation sample. |
24 | Vandecruys et al., 2024 [93] | Preschool children (Mage ≈ 5.5 years); schooling vs. non-schooling groups | 67 | Longitudinal DTI; FA and MD in AF, ILF, IFOF, CC; word reading, letter knowledge (DMT) | Behavioral reading skills improved significantly in the schooling group, but white matter changes were driven by age-related maturation, not schooling. |
25 | Roy et al., 2024 [108] | Children and young adults from diverse demographic backgrounds | 14,249 | Reading skills (e.g., TOWRE scores), white matter integrity (FA values), socio-economic factors | Dynamic relationship between reading skill gains and white matter changes over time. No evidence of static white matter properties predicting reading skills across cross-sectional datasets. |
4. Discussion
Limitations and Future Directions
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Informed Consent Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Pınar, Y.; Bayat, N.; Yüksel, B.; Özkara, Y. Reading and White Matter Development: A Systematic Review of Neuroplastic Changes in Literacy. Children 2025, 12, 710. https://doi.org/10.3390/children12060710
Pınar Y, Bayat N, Yüksel B, Özkara Y. Reading and White Matter Development: A Systematic Review of Neuroplastic Changes in Literacy. Children. 2025; 12(6):710. https://doi.org/10.3390/children12060710
Chicago/Turabian StylePınar, Yunus, Nihat Bayat, Begümhan Yüksel, and Yasin Özkara. 2025. "Reading and White Matter Development: A Systematic Review of Neuroplastic Changes in Literacy" Children 12, no. 6: 710. https://doi.org/10.3390/children12060710
APA StylePınar, Y., Bayat, N., Yüksel, B., & Özkara, Y. (2025). Reading and White Matter Development: A Systematic Review of Neuroplastic Changes in Literacy. Children, 12(6), 710. https://doi.org/10.3390/children12060710