Working Memory Impairments in Cerebellar Disorders of Childhood - 19/05/20

Abstract |
The cerebellum is a crucial center for motor control and integration. Increasing evidence supports the notion that the cerebellum is also involved in nonmotor functions. Along these lines, multiple cerebellar disorders of childhood and adulthood are associated with behavioral and cognitive symptoms, including impairments in memory. One form of memory commonly affected in cerebellar disorders is working memory, which uses attention to manipulate information that is immediately available to execute cognitive tasks. This article reviews the literature illustrating that working memory impairments are frequently observed in acquired, congenital, and genetic/developmental cerebellar disorders of childhood. Functional neuroimaging studies demonstrate that working memory tasks engage many posterior regions of the cerebellar hemispheres and vermis. Thus, the cerebellum acts as one important node in the working memory circuit, and when the cerebellum is involved in childhood disorders, deficits in working memory commonly occur.
Le texte complet de cet article est disponible en PDF.Keywords : Cerebellum, Vermis, Cognition, Intellectual Disability, Executive Function, Autism, Posterior Fossa, Pediatric
Plan
| Funding sources: The author received no funding for this work. |
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| Disclosures: Dr. Seese reports no conflicts of interests or financial disclosures. |
Vol 107
P. 16-23 - juin 2020 Retour au numéroBienvenue sur EM-consulte, la référence des professionnels de santé.
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