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Katalin Csiszar & Adam Szalontai, “Genetics of Language Disorders”, 2014.

Here I present: Katalin Csiszar & Adam Szalontai, “Genetics of Language Disorders”, 2014.

INTRODUCTION.

Katalin Csisza is a biochemist; and Adam  Szalontai is a linguist. The two paired up on this publication of the “Genetics of Language Disorders”, 2014. The abstract of the paper is shown BELOW.


“GENETICS OF LANGUAGE DISORDERS”.

Katalin Csiszar, Adam Szalontai

First published: 15 July 2014

Abstract

Developmental language disorders with heterologous and overlapping phenotypes and etiologies harbor both complex genetic and environmental influences. Analysis of the genetic elements’ and the associated phenotypic manifestations in heritable speech and language disorders including developmental verbal dyspraxia (childhood apraxia of speech), specific language impairment, stuttering, dyslexia and speech and sound disorder have revealed multiple genomic regions, quantitative trait loci, epigenetic regulators and transcriptional regulatory and co-regulatory genes with distinct core phenotypes. These analyses have also identified the contribution of genetic determinants to neuronal migration, axon guidance, brain networks, connectivity and lateralization and lysosomal functions that together with environmental modifier effects contribute to speech and language ability. A synthesis from these rich datasets allows additional conclusions that highlight the significant genetic and phenotypic overlaps among speech and language disorders. Collectively, heterogenous genomic pathways and variations in the genetic mechanisms that shape the neuronal architecture led to neurodevelopmental features and a spectrum in speech and language ability ranging from normality to impairment, consistent with a continuous distribution of multifactorial genetic and environmental causes and a broad heritable verbal trait deficiency underlying developmental speech and language disorders.

Key Concepts:

 

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