Acronyms and Definitions
ADHD: attention deficit hyperactivity disorder
Double-cortex syndrome: a neuronal migration disorder characterized by the appearance of an extra layer of neurons under the normal cortex
Epistasis: the interaction between two or more genes to control a single phenotype
Grapheme: all of the letters and letter combinations that represent a phoneme
Heritability: proportion of the phenotypic variance among individuals that can be attributed to genotypic differences
Linkage disequilibrium (LD): two loci are said to be in strong linkage disequilibrium if there has been little (or no) ancestral recombination between them
Lissencephaly: a neuronal migration disorder where neurons fail to get organized in a six-layered structure, resulting in a smooth brain surface
Magnocellular pathway: pathway responsible for the detection of objects and their boundaries as well as the perception of stimulus change including motion
Phoneme: the smallest phonetic unit of speech sound; combinations of phonemes make words
Quantitative trait locus (QTL): genes involved in determining individual differences for any quantitative measured trait, the extreme ends of which might be classified as a disorder
RD: reading disability
RNA interference (RNAi): the introduction of an RNA molecule into a cell to cause the degradation of the complementary cellular mRNA, leading to the knockdown of a specific gene activity
SLI: specific language impairment
SNP: single nucleotide polymorphism
Transparent language: a language where the letters, or groups of letters, are uniquely mapped to a single speech sound of the spoken language. For example, the “gh” combination will always make the same sound in Italian while in English it can produce the sounds “g” as in “ghost” or “ff” as in “laugh”