Reading normal and degraded words: Contribution of the dorsal and ventral visual pathways

被引:228
|
作者
Cohen, Laurent [1 ,2 ,3 ,5 ]
Dehaene, Stanislas [3 ,6 ]
Vinckier, Fabien [3 ,5 ]
Jobert, Antoinette [3 ,4 ]
Montavont, Alexandra [3 ]
机构
[1] Hop La Pitie Salpetriere, Serv Neurol 1, Dept Neurol, AP HP, F-75651 Paris 13, France
[2] Hop La Pitie Salpetriere, AP HP, Dept Neuroradiol, F-75651 Paris 13, France
[3] INSERM, Cognit Neuro Imaging Unit, IFR 49, Gif Sur Yvette, France
[4] CEA, NeuroSpin Ctr, IFR 49, Gif Sur Yvette, France
[5] Univ Paris 06, Fac Med Pitie Salpetriere, IFR 70, Paris, France
[6] Coll France, F-75231 Paris, France
关键词
D O I
10.1016/j.neuroimage.2007.11.036
中图分类号
Q189 [神经科学];
学科分类号
071006 ;
摘要
Fast, parallel word recognition, in expert readers, relies on sectors of the left ventral occipito-temporal pathway collectively known as the visual word form area. This expertise is thought to arise from perceptual learning mechanisms that extract informative features from the input strings. The perceptual expertise hypothesis leads to two predictions: (1) parallel word recognition, based on the ventral visual system, should be limited to words displayed in a familiar format (foveal horizontal words with normally spaced letters); (2) words displayed in formats outside this field of expertise should be read serially, under supervision of dorsal parietal attention systems. We presented adult readers with words that were progressively degraded in three different ways (word rotation, letter spacing, and displacement to the visual periphery). Behaviorally, we identified degradation thresholds above which reading difficulty increased non-linearly, with the concomitant emergence of a word length effect on reading latencies reflecting serial reading strategies. fMRI activations were correlated with reading difficulty in bilateral occipito-temporal and parietal regions, reflecting the strategies required to identify degraded words. A core region of the intraparietal cortex was engaged in all modes of degradation. Furthermore, in the ventral pathway, word degradation led to an amplification of activation in the posterior visual word form area, at a level thought to encode single letters. We also found an effect of word length restricted to highly degraded words in bilateral occipitoparietal regions. Those results clarify when and how the ventral parallel visual word form system needs to be supplemented by the deployment of dorsal serial reading strategies. (c) 2007 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:353 / 366
页数:14
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