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An fMRI study with written Chinese
133
Citations
24
References
2001
Year
NeuropsychologyBrain FunctionNeurolinguisticsHandwritingSemantic ProcessingVisual FormPsycholinguisticsPhonologySocial SciencesAphasiaLanguage StudiesCognitive NeuroscienceIrregular WordsCognitive ScienceSpeech ProductionLanguage NetworkLogographic ChineseNeuroscienceSpeech Neural SystemsLanguage ComprehensionFmri Study
Event-related functional magnetic resonance imaging (ER-fMRI) was used to investigate how the human brain processes phonology and transforms a word's visual form (orthography) into phonological form during reading in logographic Chinese, a writing system that differs markedly from alphabetic languages. We found that reading aloud of irregular words produced larger MR signal intensity changes over extensive regions involving left infero-middle frontal cortex, left motor cortex, right infero-frontal gyri, bilateral anterior superior temporal areas, and anterior cingulate cortex. Right superior parietal lobule, the cuneus in bilateral visual cortex, and thalamus participated in the processing of irregular, but not regular, words. These findings were discussed in comparison to neuroimaging findings from alphabetic languages, as well as in relation to models of reading.
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