The left occipitotemporal cortex has been found sensitive to the hierarchy of increasingly complex features in visually presented words, from individual letters to bigrams and morphemes. However, whether this sensitivity is a stable property of the brain regions engaged by word recognition is still unclear. To address the issue, the current study investigated whether different task demands modify this sensitivity. Participants viewed real English words and stimuli with hierarchical word-likeness while performing a lexical decision task (i.e., to decide whether each presented stimulus is a real word) and a symbol detection task. General linear model and independent component analysis indicated strong activation in the fronto-parietal and tem...
Despite decades of research on reading, including the relatively recent contributions of neuroimagin...
We report a comprehensive cartography of selective responses to visual letters and words in the huma...
Neuroimaging and lesion studies suggest that occipitotemporal brain areas play a necessary role in r...
Item does not contain fulltextEvent-related fMRI was used to investigate lexical decisions to words ...
Do task demands change the way we extract information from a stimulus, or only how we use this infor...
International audienceReading involves activation of phonological and semantic knowledge. Yet, the a...
Previous studies demonstrated that a region in the left fusiform gyrus, often referred to as the 'vi...
& People can discriminate real words from nonwords even when the latter are orthographically and...
Word-selective neural responses in human ventral occipito-temporal cortex (VOTC) emerge as children ...
In human occipitotemporal cortex, category-specific processing for visual objects seems to involve...
Item does not contain fulltextThe recognition of words is a central component of language processing...
Over the past 2 decades, researchers have tried to uncover how the human brain can extract ling...
Neurocognitive studies of visual word recognition have provided information about brain activity cor...
SummaryVisual word recognition has been proposed to rely on a hierarchy of increasingly complex neur...
Despite decades of research on reading, including the relatively recent contributions of neuroimagin...
Despite decades of research on reading, including the relatively recent contributions of neuroimagin...
We report a comprehensive cartography of selective responses to visual letters and words in the huma...
Neuroimaging and lesion studies suggest that occipitotemporal brain areas play a necessary role in r...
Item does not contain fulltextEvent-related fMRI was used to investigate lexical decisions to words ...
Do task demands change the way we extract information from a stimulus, or only how we use this infor...
International audienceReading involves activation of phonological and semantic knowledge. Yet, the a...
Previous studies demonstrated that a region in the left fusiform gyrus, often referred to as the 'vi...
& People can discriminate real words from nonwords even when the latter are orthographically and...
Word-selective neural responses in human ventral occipito-temporal cortex (VOTC) emerge as children ...
In human occipitotemporal cortex, category-specific processing for visual objects seems to involve...
Item does not contain fulltextThe recognition of words is a central component of language processing...
Over the past 2 decades, researchers have tried to uncover how the human brain can extract ling...
Neurocognitive studies of visual word recognition have provided information about brain activity cor...
SummaryVisual word recognition has been proposed to rely on a hierarchy of increasingly complex neur...
Despite decades of research on reading, including the relatively recent contributions of neuroimagin...
Despite decades of research on reading, including the relatively recent contributions of neuroimagin...
We report a comprehensive cartography of selective responses to visual letters and words in the huma...
Neuroimaging and lesion studies suggest that occipitotemporal brain areas play a necessary role in r...