| Literature DB >> 33099075 |
Xiaodong Liu1, Luc Vermeylen2, David Wisniewski2, Marc Brysbaert2.
Abstract
Lateralization is a critical characteristic of language production and also plays a role in visual word recognition. However, the neural mechanisms underlying the interactions between visual input and spoken word representations are still unclear. We investigated the contribution of sub-lexical phonological information in visual word processing by exploiting the fact that Chinese characters can contain phonetic radicals in either the left or right half of the character. FMRI data were collected while 39 Chinese participants read words in search of target color words. On the basis of whole-brain analysis and three laterality analyses of regions of interest, we argue that visual information from centrally presented Chinese characters is split in the fovea and projected to the contralateral visual cortex, from which phonological information can be extracted rapidly if the character contains a phonetic radical. Extra activation, suggestive of more effortful processing, is observed when the phonetic radical is situated in the left half of the character and therefore initially sent to the visual cortex in the right hemisphere that is less specialized for language processing. Our results are in line with the proposal that phonological information helps written word processing by means of top-down feedback.Entities:
Keywords: Assembled phonology; Chinese word processing; Split fovea; fMRI
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33099075 DOI: 10.1016/j.cortex.2020.09.010
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cortex ISSN: 0010-9452 Impact factor: 4.027