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      The literate brain: the relationship between spelling and reading.

      1 ,
      Journal of cognitive neuroscience
      MIT Press - Journals

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          Abstract

          We report the results of an fMRI investigation of the neural bases of written language comprehension (reading) and production (spelling). Both tasks were examined in the same individuals, allowing greater precision in establishing the relationship between the neural underpinnings of these two cognitive functions. Also examined was the relationship between written language substrates and those involved in face and object (house) processing. The results reveal that reading and spelling share specific left hemisphere substrates in the mid-fusiform gyrus and in the inferior frontal gyrus/junction. Furthermore, the results indicate that the left mid-fusiform substrates are specifically involved in lexical orthographic processing. We also find that written language and face processing exhibit largely complementary activation patterns in both the fusiform and the inferior frontal/junction areas, with left and right lateralization, respectively. In sum, these results provide perhaps the strongest evidence to date of components that are shared by written language comprehension (reading) and production (spelling), and they further our understanding of the role of literacy within the larger repertoire of cognitive operations and their neural substrates.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          J Cogn Neurosci
          Journal of cognitive neuroscience
          MIT Press - Journals
          1530-8898
          0898-929X
          May 2011
          : 23
          : 5
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Department of Cognitive Science, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD 21218, USA. e-mail: rapp@cogsci.jhu.edu
          Article
          NIHMS294432
          10.1162/jocn.2010.21507
          3106999
          20433242
          aae8dad4-4bf2-4891-b55d-977ec3cf498f
          History

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