Orthographic and phonological processing of Chinese characters: an fMRI study

被引:125
作者
Kuo, WJ
Yeh, TC
Lee, JR
Chen, LF
Lee, PL
Chen, SS
Ho, LT
Hung, DL
Tzeng, OJL
Hsieh, JC
机构
[1] Taipei Vet Gen Hosp, Lab Integrated Brain Res, Dept Med Res & Educ, Taipei 112, Taiwan
[2] Natl Yang Ming Univ, Cognit Neuropsychol Lab, Taipei 112, Taiwan
[3] Natl Yang Ming Univ, Ctr Neurosci, Taipei 112, Taiwan
[4] Natl Yang Ming Univ, Fac Med, Sch Med, Taipei 112, Taiwan
[5] Natl Cent Univ, Inst Cognit Neurosci, Taipei, Taiwan
[6] Natl Yang Ming Univ, Inst Hlth Informat & Decis Making, Sch Med, Taipei 112, Taiwan
[7] Natl Yang Ming Univ, Inst Neurosci, Sch Life Sci, Taipei 112, Taiwan
[8] Acad Sinica, Inst Linguist, Taipei, Taiwan
[9] Natl Yang Ming Univ, Brain Res Ctr, Univ Syst Taiwan, Taipei, Taiwan
关键词
fMRI; inferior frontal cortex; reading; orthographic processing; phonological processing; Chinese; character;
D O I
10.1016/j.neuroimage.2003.12.007
中图分类号
Q189 [神经科学];
学科分类号
071006 ;
摘要
The present study used functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) to investigate the neural mechanisms underlying the orthographic and phonological processing of Chinese characters. Four tasks were devised, including one homophone judgment and three physical judgments of characters, pseudo-characters, and Korean-like nonsense figures. While the left occipitotemporal region, left dorsal processing stream, and right middle frontal gyrus constitute a network for orthographic processing, the left premotor gyrus, left middle/inferior frontal gyrus, supplementary motor area (SMA), and the left temporoparietal region work in concert for phonological processing. The ventral part of the left inferior frontal cortex responds specifically to the character stimuli, suggesting a general lexical processing role for this region for linguistic material. The stronger activation of the dorsal visual stream by Chinese homophone judgment pinpoints a tight coupling between phonological representation of Chinese characters and corresponding orthographic percepts. The concomitant engagement of sets of regions for different levels of Chinese orthographic and phonological processing is consistent with the notion of distributed parallel processing. (C) 2004 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:1721 / 1731
页数:11
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