We use cookies to understand how you use our site and to improve your experience. This includes personalizing content and advertising. To learn more, click here. By continuing to use our site, you accept our use of cookies. Cookie Policy.

MedImaging

Download Mobile App
Recent News Radiography MRI Ultrasound Nuclear Medicine General/Advanced Imaging Imaging IT Industry News

Reading with Children Offers Cognitive Improvement

By MedImaging International staff writers
Posted on 07 Jun 2017
Print article
Image: A shared reading experience between pre-school children and their parents could result in improved literacy and brain development (Photo courtesy of Cincinnati Children\'s Hospital Medical Center).
Image: A shared reading experience between pre-school children and their parents could result in improved literacy and brain development (Photo courtesy of Cincinnati Children\'s Hospital Medical Center).
A new international study into the cognitive development of pre-school children has shown that reading stories while engaging with the children results in significantly greater brain activity, and suggests resulting improvements in engagement and understanding.

The researchers used functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (fMRI) for the study, which reinforces previous research showing the value of dialogic reading during the early development of children.

The study was led by researchers from the Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center (Cincinnati, OH, USA) and was published in the May 31, 2017, issue of the journal PLOS ONE. The aim of the study was to investigate how engagement and verbal interactivity during reading affected neural activation and brain connectivity in 22, four year-old girls. The researchers found that those children who showed more interest in the stories read also had greater activation in the right-sided cerebellar areas of their brains.

Lead author of the study, pediatrician John Hutton, MD, said, "The takeaway for parents in this study is that they should engage more when reading with their child, ask questions, have them turn the page, and interact with each other. In turn, this could fuel brain activation – or "turbocharge" the development of literacy skills, particularly comprehension, in preschool aged children. Our findings underscore the importance of interventions explicitly addressing both parent and child reading engagement, including awareness and reduction of distractions such as cell phones, which were the most common preventable barrier that we observed."

Related Links:
Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center

New
Mobile Cath Lab
Photon F65/F80
Portable Color Doppler Ultrasound System
S5000
NMUS & MSK Ultrasound
InVisus Pro
Silver Member
X-Ray QA Meter
T3 AD Pro

Print article

Channels

Ultrasound

view channel
Image: The new type of Sonogenetic EchoBack-CAR T cell (Photo courtesy of Longwei Liu/USC)

Smart Ultrasound-Activated Immune Cells Destroy Cancer Cells for Extended Periods

Chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T-cell therapy has emerged as a highly promising cancer treatment, especially for bloodborne cancers like leukemia. This highly personalized therapy involves extracting... Read more

Imaging IT

view channel
Image: The new Medical Imaging Suite makes healthcare imaging data more accessible, interoperable and useful (Photo courtesy of Google Cloud)

New Google Cloud Medical Imaging Suite Makes Imaging Healthcare Data More Accessible

Medical imaging is a critical tool used to diagnose patients, and there are billions of medical images scanned globally each year. Imaging data accounts for about 90% of all healthcare data1 and, until... Read more