Neurocognition, Learning, and Well-being in Resettled Refugees

The Impact of Interrupted Schooling on Neurodevelopment for Reading in Resettled Refugee Children

As children learn to read, brain regions associated with visual and language processing form specialized cortical circuits involving predominantly left-hemisphere occipitotemporal, temporoparietal, and frontal regions—the brain’s ‘reading network’. Reading experience drives the functional neural specialization for reading. To date, the critical role of experience in functional neural specialization has remained unexamined because most research has only examined neurodevelopmental trajectories for reading in children with reading experience— children who begin formal literacy instruction when they enroll in school at a government-mandated age (6 years). Our existing approaches to studying the emergence of reading function in the brain cannot separate the discrete effects of experience and age. An important theoretical advance would be to test how the brain’s reading network forms through reading experience or lack thereof across development. The resettlement of refugee children provides an opportunity to address these outstanding issues. For refugee children, displacement and migration often corresponds to a period of interrupted schooling and limited reading experience. As refugee children of different ages resettle in Canada, they learn a new language and learn to read at school. Individual differences in language and reading experiences among refugee children provide a ‘natural paradigm’ from which we can test specific hypotheses concerning the role of experience in functional neural specialization for reading. We use functional neuroimaging to examine the emergence of neural systems for reading in children who have experienced variable periods of interrupted schooling and resumed schooling/learning to read at different ages. Examining the role of experience in the functional neural specialization for reading will provide important theoretical and practical insights—we gain a deeper understanding of the development of neural systems across diverse developmental experiences, and the changing plasticity of neural systems across development.

Research Partners: 
Funding: Connaught New Researcher Award (PI: K. Jasińska); Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council (NSERC; PI: K. Jasińska)