Literature DB >> 23670980

Top-down and bottom-up influences on the left ventral occipito-temporal cortex during visual word recognition: an analysis of effective connectivity.

Matthias Schurz1, Martin Kronbichler, Julia Crone, Fabio Richlan, Johannes Klackl, Heinz Wimmer.   

Abstract

The functional role of the left ventral occipito-temporal cortex (vOT) in visual word processing has been studied extensively. A prominent observation is higher activation for unfamiliar but pronounceable letter strings compared to regular words in this region. Some functional accounts have interpreted this finding as driven by top-down influences (e.g., Dehaene and Cohen [2011]: Trends Cogn Sci 15:254-262; Price and Devlin [2011]: Trends Cogn Sci 15:246-253), while others have suggested a difference in bottom-up processing (e.g., Glezer et al. [2009]: Neuron 62:199-204; Kronbichler et al. [2007]: J Cogn Neurosci 19:1584-1594). We used dynamic causal modeling for fMRI data to test bottom-up and top-down influences on the left vOT during visual processing of regular words and unfamiliar letter strings. Regular words (e.g., taxi) and unfamiliar letter strings of pseudohomophones (e.g., taksi) were presented in the context of a phonological lexical decision task (i.e., "Does the item sound like a word?"). We found no differences in top-down signaling, but a strong increase in bottom-up signaling from the occipital cortex to the left vOT for pseudohomophones compared to words. This finding can be linked to functional accounts which assume that the left vOT contains neurons tuned to complex orthographic features such as morphemes or words [e.g., Dehaene and Cohen [2011]: Trends Cogn Sci 15:254-262; Kronbichler et al. [2007]: J Cogn Neurosci 19:1584-1594]: For words, bottom-up signals converge onto a matching orthographic representation in the left vOT. For pseudohomophones, the propagated signals do not converge, but (partially) activate multiple orthographic word representations, reflected in increased effective connectivity.
Copyright © 2013 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

Keywords:  brain connectivity; dynamic causal modeling; fMRI; reading; visual recognition

Mesh:

Year:  2013        PMID: 23670980      PMCID: PMC6869758          DOI: 10.1002/hbm.22281

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Hum Brain Mapp        ISSN: 1065-9471            Impact factor:   5.038


  46 in total

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4.  Evidence for highly selective neuronal tuning to whole words in the "visual word form area".

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5.  Taxi vs. taksi: on orthographic word recognition in the left ventral occipitotemporal cortex.

Authors:  Martin Kronbichler; Jürgen Bergmann; Florian Hutzler; Wolfgang Staffen; Alois Mair; Gunther Ladurner; Heinz Wimmer
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10.  Efficient visual object and word recognition relies on high spatial frequency coding in the left posterior fusiform gyrus: evidence from a case-series of patients with ventral occipito-temporal cortex damage.

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  17 in total

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2.  Uncovering phonological and orthographic selectivity across the reading network using fMRI-RA.

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3.  Neural correlates of the lexicality effect in children.

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Review 4.  Functional neuroanatomy of developmental dyslexia: the role of orthographic depth.

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6.  Drifting through Basic Subprocesses of Reading: A Hierarchical Diffusion Model Analysis of Age Effects on Visual Word Recognition.

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