Issue Online: 23 October 2019Investigations into the neural basis of reading have shed light on the cortical locus and the functional role of visual-orthographic processing. Yet, the fine-grained structure of neural representations subserving reading remains to be clarified. Here, we capitalize on the spatiotemporal structure of electroencephalography (EEG) data to examine if and how EEG patterns can serve to decode and reconstruct the internal representation of visually presented words in healthy adults. Our results show that word classification and image reconstruction were accurate well above chance, that their temporal profile exhibited an early onset, soon after 100 ms, and peaked around 170 ms. Further, reconstruction results ...
Over the past 2 decades, researchers have tried to uncover how the human brain can extract ling...
International audienceThe present study explored the possibility to use Steady-State Visual Evoked P...
Learning to read is associated with the appearance of an orthographically sensitive brain region kno...
Published: 12 October 2021Over the past 2 decades, researchers have tried to uncover how the human b...
A long-standing debate in reading research is whether printed words are perceived in a feedforward m...
peer reviewedRecently frequency tagging with EEG recordings proved efficient to measure the neural b...
A vital component of visual word recognition is the decoding of orthography, the rules by which lang...
<p>Current research on the neurobiological bases of reading points to the privileged role of a ventr...
Despite decades of research on reading, including the relatively recent contributions of neuroimagin...
Reading is one of the most important human skills and has been studied for years with different tech...
Despite decades of research on reading, including the relatively recent contributions of neuroimagin...
The ability to fluently and, seemingly effortlessly, read words is one of few uniquely special human...
Despite a century of research into visual word recognition, basic questions remain unresolved about ...
Current research on the neurobiological bases of reading points to the privileged role of a ventral ...
Most current models assume that the perceptual and cognitive processes of visual word recognition an...
Over the past 2 decades, researchers have tried to uncover how the human brain can extract ling...
International audienceThe present study explored the possibility to use Steady-State Visual Evoked P...
Learning to read is associated with the appearance of an orthographically sensitive brain region kno...
Published: 12 October 2021Over the past 2 decades, researchers have tried to uncover how the human b...
A long-standing debate in reading research is whether printed words are perceived in a feedforward m...
peer reviewedRecently frequency tagging with EEG recordings proved efficient to measure the neural b...
A vital component of visual word recognition is the decoding of orthography, the rules by which lang...
<p>Current research on the neurobiological bases of reading points to the privileged role of a ventr...
Despite decades of research on reading, including the relatively recent contributions of neuroimagin...
Reading is one of the most important human skills and has been studied for years with different tech...
Despite decades of research on reading, including the relatively recent contributions of neuroimagin...
The ability to fluently and, seemingly effortlessly, read words is one of few uniquely special human...
Despite a century of research into visual word recognition, basic questions remain unresolved about ...
Current research on the neurobiological bases of reading points to the privileged role of a ventral ...
Most current models assume that the perceptual and cognitive processes of visual word recognition an...
Over the past 2 decades, researchers have tried to uncover how the human brain can extract ling...
International audienceThe present study explored the possibility to use Steady-State Visual Evoked P...
Learning to read is associated with the appearance of an orthographically sensitive brain region kno...