Publication | Closed Access
Letter Binding and Invariant Recognition of Masked Words
340
Citations
30
References
2004
Year
Letter BindingNeuropsychologyFluent ReadersNeurolinguisticsPsycholinguisticsAttentionSocial SciencesSpeech RecognitionEarly VisionPattern RecognitionText RecognitionInvariant Word RecognitionRetinal LocationLanguage StudiesCharacter RecognitionCognitive NeuroscienceCognitive ScienceBlindsightOptical Character RecognitionMorphologyVision ResearchVisual ProcessingSpeech CommunicationVisual FunctionSpeech ProcessingNeuroscienceLinguistics
Fluent readers recognize visual words across changes in case and retinal location, while maintaining a high sensitivity to the arrangement of letters. To evaluate the automaticity and functional anatomy of invariant word recognition, we measured brain activity during subliminal masked priming. By preceding target words with an unrelated prime, a repeated prime, or an anagram made of the same letters, we separated letter-level and whole-word codes. By changing the case and the retinal location of primes and targets, we evaluated the invariance of those codes. Our results indicate that an invariant binding of letters into words is achieved unconsciously through a series of increasingly invariant stages in the left occipito-temporal pathway.
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