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      The depth and breadth of multiple perceptual asymmetries in right handers and non-right handers

      1 , 2 , 1
      Laterality: Asymmetries of Body, Brain and Cognition
      Informa UK Limited

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          How learning to read changes the cortical networks for vision and language.

          Does literacy improve brain function? Does it also entail losses? Using functional magnetic resonance imaging, we measured brain responses to spoken and written language, visual faces, houses, tools, and checkers in adults of variable literacy (10 were illiterate, 22 became literate as adults, and 31 were literate in childhood). As literacy enhanced the left fusiform activation evoked by writing, it induced a small competition with faces at this location, but also broadly enhanced visual responses in fusiform and occipital cortex, extending to area V1. Literacy also enhanced phonological activation to speech in the planum temporale and afforded a top-down activation of orthography from spoken inputs. Most changes occurred even when literacy was acquired in adulthood, emphasizing that both childhood and adult education can profoundly refine cortical organization.
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            Pseudoneglect: a review and meta-analysis of performance factors in line bisection tasks

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              Dorsal and Ventral Pathways for Prosody.

              Our vocal tone--the prosody--contributes a lot to the meaning of speech beyond the actual words. Indeed, the hesitant tone of a "yes" may be more telling than its affirmative lexical meaning. The human brain contains dorsal and ventral processing streams in the left hemisphere that underlie core linguistic abilities such as phonology, syntax, and semantics. Whether or not prosody--a reportedly right-hemispheric faculty--involves analogous processing streams is a matter of debate. Functional connectivity studies on prosody leave no doubt about the existence of such streams, but opinions diverge on whether information travels along dorsal or ventral pathways. Here we show, with a novel paradigm using audio morphing combined with multimodal neuroimaging and brain stimulation, that prosody perception takes dual routes along dorsal and ventral pathways in the right hemisphere. In experiment 1, categorization of speech stimuli that gradually varied in their prosodic pitch contour (between statement and question) involved (1) an auditory ventral pathway along the superior temporal lobe and (2) auditory-motor dorsal pathways connecting posterior temporal and inferior frontal/premotor areas. In experiment 2, inhibitory stimulation of right premotor cortex as a key node of the dorsal stream decreased participants' performance in prosody categorization, arguing for a motor involvement in prosody perception. These data draw a dual-stream picture of prosodic processing that parallels the established left-hemispheric multi-stream architecture of language, but with relative rightward asymmetry.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Laterality: Asymmetries of Body, Brain and Cognition
                Laterality: Asymmetries of Body, Brain and Cognition
                Informa UK Limited
                1357-650X
                1464-0678
                August 09 2019
                August 09 2019
                : 1-33
                Affiliations
                [1 ] Perception, Action and Memory Research Group, School of Psychology, Bangor University, Bangor, UK
                [2 ] Sports Psychology Group, UCFB Wembley, London, UK
                Article
                10.1080/1357650X.2019.1652308
                31399020
                267205a4-5ae9-48e6-b553-569d396a1ea2
                © 2019
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