What and "where" in word reading: Ventral coding of written words revealed by parietal atrophy

被引:58
作者
Vinckier, Fabien
Naccache, Lionel
Papeix, Caroline
Forget, Joaquim
Hahn-Barma, Valerie
Dehaene, Stanislas
Cohen, Laurent
机构
[1] Hop La Pitie Salpetriere, Serv Neurol 1, F-75651 Paris 13, France
[2] INSERM, CEA, DSV, U562, F-75654 Paris, France
[3] Univ Paris 06, F-75252 Paris 05, France
关键词
D O I
10.1162/jocn.2006.18.12.1998
中图分类号
Q189 [神经科学];
学科分类号
071006 ;
摘要
The visual system of literate adults develops a remarkable perceptual expertise for printed words. To delineate the aspects of this competence intrinsic to the occipitotemporal "what" pathway, we studied a patient with bilateral lesions of the occipitoparietal "where" pathway. Depending on critical geometric features of the display (rotation angle, letter spacing, mirror reversal, etc.), she switched from a good performance, when her intact ventral pathway was sufficient to encode words, to severely impaired reading, when her parietal lesions prevented the use of alternative reading strategies as a result of spatial and attentional impairments. In particular, reading was disrupted (a) by rotating word by more than 50, providing an approximation of the invariance range for words encoding in the ventral pathway; (b) by separating letters with double spaces, revealing the limits of letter grouping into perceptual wholes; (c) by mirror-reversing words, showing that words escape the default mirror-invariant representation of visual objects in the ventral pathway. Moreover, because of her parietal lesions, she was unable to discriminate mirror images of common objects, although she was excellent with reversible pseudowords, confirming that the breaking of mirror symmetry was intrinsic to the occipitotemporal cortex. Thus, charting the display conditions associated with preserved or impaired performance allowed us to infer properties of word coding in the normal ventral pathway and to delineate the roles of the parietal lobes in single-word recognition.
引用
收藏
页码:1998 / 2012
页数:15
相关论文
共 83 条
[11]   Specialization within the ventral stream: the case for the visual word form area [J].
Cohen, L ;
Dehaene, S .
NEUROIMAGE, 2004, 22 (01) :466-476
[12]   Visual word recognition in the left and right hemispheres:: Anatomical and functional correlates of peripheral alexias [J].
Cohen, L ;
Martinaud, O ;
Lemer, C ;
Lehéricy, S ;
Samson, Y ;
Obadia, M ;
Slachevsky, A ;
Dehaene, S .
CEREBRAL CORTEX, 2003, 13 (12) :1313-1333
[13]   The pathophysiology of letter-by-letter reading [J].
Cohen, L ;
Henry, C ;
Dehaene, S ;
Martinaud, O ;
Lehéricy, S ;
Lemer, C ;
Ferrieux, S .
NEUROPSYCHOLOGIA, 2004, 42 (13) :1768-1780
[14]  
COHEN L, IN PRESS NEURAL BASI
[15]  
Cooper L.A., 1973, Visual information processing, P75
[16]   WINDING ONES PS AND QS - MENTAL ROTATION AND MIRROR-IMAGE DISCRIMINATION [J].
CORBALLIS, MC ;
MCLAREN, R .
JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY-HUMAN PERCEPTION AND PERFORMANCE, 1984, 10 (02) :318-327
[17]   DECISIONS ABOUT IDENTITY AND ORIENTATION OF ROTATED LETTERS AND DIGITS [J].
CORBALLIS, MC ;
ZBRODOFF, NJ ;
SHETZER, LI ;
BUTLER, PB .
MEMORY & COGNITION, 1978, 6 (02) :98-107
[18]   SIMULTANAGNOSIA - TO SEE BUT NOT 2 SEE [J].
COSLETT, HB ;
SAFFRAN, E .
BRAIN, 1991, 114 :1523-1545
[19]   A particular difficulty in discriminating between mirror images [J].
Davidoff, J ;
Warrington, EK .
NEUROPSYCHOLOGIA, 2001, 39 (10) :1022-1036
[20]   What do letter migration errors reveal about letter position coding in visual word recognition? [J].
Davis, CJ ;
Bowers, JS .
JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY-HUMAN PERCEPTION AND PERFORMANCE, 2004, 30 (05) :923-941