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Olulade, Olumide A.; Flowers, D. Lynn; Napoliello, Eileen M.; Eden, Guinevere F. – Brain and Language, 2013
The visual word form system (VWFS), located in the occipito-temporal cortex, is involved in orthographic processing of visually presented words (Cohen et al., 2002). Recent fMRI studies in children and adults have demonstrated a gradient of increasing word-selectivity along the posterior-to-anterior axis of this system (Vinckier et al., 2007), yet…
Descriptors: Children, Adults, Word Recognition, Brain Hemisphere Functions
Zou, Lijuan; Desroches, Amy S.; Liu, Youyi; Xia, Zhichao; Shu, Hua – Brain and Language, 2012
Orthographic influences in spoken word recognition have been previously examined in alphabetic languages. However, it is unknown whether orthographic information affects spoken word recognition in Chinese, which has a clean dissociation between orthography (O) and phonology (P). The present study investigated orthographic effects using event…
Descriptors: Reading Skills, Phonology, Word Recognition, Orthographic Symbols
Halderman, Laura K. – Brain and Language, 2011
The extent to which orthographic and phonological processes are available during the initial moments of word recognition within each hemisphere is under specified, particularly for the right hemisphere. Few studies have investigated whether each hemisphere uses orthography and phonology under constraints that restrict the viewing time of words and…
Descriptors: Evidence, Phonology, Reading Processes, Word Recognition
Hsiao, Janet Hui-wen – Brain and Language, 2011
In Chinese orthography, a dominant character structure exists in which a semantic radical appears on the left and a phonetic radical on the right (SP characters); a minority opposite arrangement also exists (PS characters). As the number of phonetic radical types is much greater than semantic radical types, in SP characters the information is…
Descriptors: Phonetics, Semantics, Personality, Word Recognition
Welcome, Suzanne E.; Joanisse, Marc F. – Brain and Language, 2012
We used fMRI to examine patterns of brain activity associated with component processes of visual word recognition and their relationships to individual differences in reading skill. We manipulated both the judgments adults made on written stimuli and the characteristics of the stimuli. Phonological processing led to activation in left inferior…
Descriptors: Reading Comprehension, Visual Stimuli, Semantics, Sight Vocabulary
Lavidor, Michal; Johnston, Rhona; Snowling, Margaret J. – Brain and Language, 2006
Both cerebral hemispheres contain phonological, orthographic and semantic representations of words, however there are between-hemisphere differences in the relative engagement and specialization of the different representations. Taking orthographic processing for example, previous studies suggest that orthographic neighbourhood size (N) has…
Descriptors: Phonology, Dyslexia, Semantics, Brain Hemisphere Functions
Kemps, Rachel; Ernestus, Mirjam; Schreuder, Robert; Baayen, Harald – Brain and Language, 2004
Listeners cannot recognize highly reduced word forms in isolation, but they can do so when these forms are presented in context (Ernestus, Baayen, & Schreuder, 2002). This suggests that not all possible surface forms of words have equal status in the mental lexicon. The present study shows that the reduced forms are linked to the canonical…
Descriptors: Word Recognition, Suffixes, Language Processing, Phonology
Samson, Dana; Pillon, Agnesa – Brain and Language, 2004
The experiment reported here investigated the sensitivity of concreteness effects to orthographic neighborhood density and frequency in the visual lexical decision task. The concreteness effect was replicated with a sample of concrete and abstract words that were not matched for orthographic neighborhood features and in which concrete words turned…
Descriptors: Semantics, Word Recognition, Word Frequency, Orthographic Symbols
Ellis, Andrew W. – Brain and Language, 2004
It has long been known that the number of letters in a word has more of an effect on recognition speed and accuracy in the left visual field (LVF) than in the right visual field (RVF) provided that the word is presented in a standard, horizontal format. After considering the basis of the length by visual field interaction two further differences…
Descriptors: Word Recognition, Visual Perception, Eye Movements, Language Processing
Halderman, Laura K.; Chiarello, Christine – Brain and Language, 2005
A lateralized backward masking paradigm was used to examine hemisphere differences in orthographic and phonological processes at an early time course of word recognition. Targets (e.g., bowl) were presented and backward masked by either pseudohomophones of the target word (orthographically and phonologically similar, e.g., BOAL), orthographically…
Descriptors: Visual Stimuli, Phonology, Word Recognition, Reading Processes
Lavidor, Michal; Hayes, Adrian; Shillcock, Richard; Ellis, Andrew W. – Brain and Language, 2004
The split fovea theory proposes that visual word recognition of centrally presented words is mediated by the splitting of the foveal image, with letters to the left of fixation being projected to the right hemisphere (RH) and letters to the right of fixation being projected to the left hemisphere (LH). Two lexical decision experiments aimed to…
Descriptors: Word Recognition, Language Processing, Visual Stimuli, Orthographic Symbols