The cerebellum's role in cognitive skills
was examined in a child (L.C.) with focal injury to the
left cerebellum. Initial symptoms included aphasia and
dysarthria. At 3 and 9 months post-injury, clinical neuropsychological
tests revealed persistent psychomotor slowing as well as
deficits in executive functions. Further cognitive testing
at 13 and 16 months post-injury demonstrated that L.C.
processed information from both the linguistic and nonlinguistic
domains more slowly than age-, grade- and sex-matched controls.
Notably, her linguistic processing was more than twice
as slow as that of her peers, whereas her nonlinguistic
processing was only approximately 20% slower. Within each
domain the degree of cognitive slowing was approximately
the same across diverse tasks. These results are consistent
with the hypothesis of a cerebellar contribution to cognitive
processing, particularly the processing of linguistic information.
(JINS, 1998, 4, 491–501.)