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      Current themes in neuroimaging studies of reading

      research-article
      *
      Brain and Language
      Academic Press
      Reading, Neuroimaging, fMRI, MEG, TMS, DTI

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          Abstract

          This editorial provides a summary of the highlights from 11 new papers that have been published in a special issue of Brain and Language on the neurobiology of reading. The topics investigate reading mechanisms in both adults and children. Several of the findings illustrate how responses in the left ventral occipito-temporal cortex, and other reading areas, change with learning, expertise and the task: In the early stages of reading acquisition, learning/expertise increases activation in reading areas as well as in an attentionally-controlled, learning circuit. In later stages, expertise and efficiency decrease activation within the reading network and increase anatomical connectivity. Special interest is given to a white matter tract (the vertical occipital fasciculus) that projects dorsally from the left occipito-temporal cortex to the posterior parietal lobe. This observation fits with a magnetoencephalography study showing how activity in the angular gyrus is influenced by early occipito-temporal activity; with angular gyrus activity contributing to inferior frontal activity. Overall, the papers within the special issue illustrate the wide range of different techniques that can be used to reveal the functional anatomy of reading and the time course of activity within the different reading pathways.

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          Most cited references12

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          The Interactive Account of ventral occipitotemporal contributions to reading

          The ventral occipitotemporal cortex (vOT) is involved in the perception of visually presented objects and written words. The Interactive Account of vOT function is based on the premise that perception involves the synthesis of bottom-up sensory input with top-down predictions that are generated automatically from prior experience. We propose that vOT integrates visuospatial features abstracted from sensory inputs with higher level associations such as speech sounds, actions and meanings. In this context, specialization for orthography emerges from regional interactions without assuming that vOT is selectively tuned to orthographic features. We discuss how the Interactive Account explains left vOT responses during normal reading and developmental dyslexia; and how it accounts for the behavioural consequences of left vOT damage.
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            Anatomy of the visual word form area: adjacent cortical circuits and long-range white matter connections.

            Circuitry in ventral occipital-temporal cortex is essential for seeing words. We analyze the circuitry within a specific ventral-occipital region, the visual word form area (VWFA). The VWFA is immediately adjacent to the retinotopically organized VO-1 and VO-2 visual field maps and lies medial and inferior to visual field maps within motion selective human cortex. Three distinct white matter fascicles pass within close proximity to the VWFA: (1) the inferior longitudinal fasciculus, (2) the inferior frontal occipital fasciculus, and (3) the vertical occipital fasciculus. The vertical occipital fasciculus terminates in or adjacent to the functionally defined VWFA voxels in every individual. The vertical occipital fasciculus projects dorsally to language and reading related cortex. The combination of functional responses from cortex and anatomical measures in the white matter provides an overview of how the written word is encoded and communicated along the ventral occipital-temporal circuitry for seeing words. Copyright © 2012 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
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              The relationship between phonological and auditory processing and brain organization in beginning readers.

              We employed brain-behavior analyses to explore the relationship between performance on tasks measuring phonological awareness, pseudoword decoding, and rapid auditory processing (all predictors of reading (dis)ability) and brain organization for print and speech in beginning readers. For print-related activation, we observed a shared set of skill-correlated regions, including left hemisphere temporoparietal and occipitotemporal sites, as well as inferior frontal, visual, visual attention, and subcortical components. For speech-related activation, shared variance among reading skill measures was most prominently correlated with activation in left hemisphere inferior frontal gyrus and precuneus. Implications for brain-based models of literacy acquisition are discussed. Copyright © 2012 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Journal
                Brain Lang
                Brain Lang
                Brain and Language
                Academic Press
                0093-934X
                1090-2155
                1 May 2013
                May 2013
                : 125
                : 2
                : 131-133
                Affiliations
                Wellcome Trust Centre for Neuroimaging, UCL, London WC1N 3BG, United Kingdom
                Author notes
                [* ]Fax: +44 207 813 1420. c.j.price@ 123456ucl.ac.uk
                Article
                YBRLN4077
                10.1016/j.bandl.2013.02.002
                3639368
                23473814
                22944b83-cc5d-4083-bc1d-08916185331b
                © 2013 Elsevier Inc.

                This document may be redistributed and reused, subject to certain conditions.

                History
                Categories
                Article

                Neurosciences
                reading,neuroimaging,fmri,meg,tms,dti
                Neurosciences
                reading, neuroimaging, fmri, meg, tms, dti

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