Neural Correlates of Letter Reversal in Children and Adults

被引:24
作者
Blackburne, Liwei King [1 ]
Eddy, Marianna D. [1 ]
Kalra, Priya [3 ]
Yee, Debbie [1 ]
Sinha, Pawan [1 ]
Gabrieli, John D. E. [1 ,2 ]
机构
[1] MIT, Dept Brain & Cognit Sci, Cambridge, MA 02139 USA
[2] MIT, McGovern Inst Brain Res, Cambridge, MA 02139 USA
[3] Harvard Univ, Grad Sch Educ, Cambridge, MA 02138 USA
基金
美国国家科学基金会;
关键词
MENTAL ROTATION; HUMAN BRAIN; RECOGNITION; CORTEX; FACE; CATEGORIZATION; SPECIALIZATION; ORGANIZATION; PERCEPTION; MECHANISMS;
D O I
10.1371/journal.pone.0098386
中图分类号
O [数理科学和化学]; P [天文学、地球科学]; Q [生物科学]; N [自然科学总论];
学科分类号
07 ; 0710 ; 09 ;
摘要
Children often make letter reversal errors when first learning to read and write, even for letters whose reversed forms do not appear in normal print. However, the brain basis of such letter reversal in children learning to read is unknown. The present study compared the neuroanatomical correlates (via functional magnetic resonance imaging) and the electrophysiological correlates (via event-related potentials or ERPs) of this phenomenon in children, ages 5-12, relative to young adults. When viewing reversed letters relative to typically oriented letters, adults exhibited widespread occipital, parietal, and temporal lobe activations, including activation in the functionally localized visual word form area (VWFA) in left occipito-temporal cortex. Adults exhibited significantly greater activation than children in all of these regions; children only exhibited such activation in a limited frontal region. Similarly, on the P1 and N170 ERP components, adults exhibited significantly greater differences between typical and reversed letters than children, who failed to exhibit significant differences between typical and reversed letters. These findings indicate that adults distinguish typical and reversed letters in the early stages of specialized brain processing of print, but that children do not recognize this distinction during the early stages of processing. Specialized brain processes responsible for early stages of letter perception that distinguish between typical and reversed letters may develop slowly and remain immature even in older children who no longer produce letter reversals in their writing.
引用
收藏
页数:15
相关论文
共 61 条
[1]   Functional activation of the human brain during mental rotation [J].
Alivisatos, B ;
Petrides, M .
NEUROPSYCHOLOGIA, 1997, 35 (02) :111-118
[2]   Electrophysiological studies of human face perception. I: Potentials generated in occipitotemporal cortex by face and non-face stimuli [J].
Allison, T ;
Puce, A ;
Spencer, DD ;
McCarthy, G .
CEREBRAL CORTEX, 1999, 9 (05) :415-430
[3]  
[Anonymous], READING IN THE BRAIN
[4]   Visual word processing and experiential origins of functional selectivity in human extrastriate cortex [J].
Baker, Chris I. ;
Liu, Jia ;
Wald, Lawrence L. ;
Kwong, Kenneth K. ;
Benner, Thomas ;
Kanwisher, Nancy .
PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, 2007, 104 (21) :9087-9092
[5]   ERP evidence of a meaningfulness impact on visual global/local processing: When meaning captures attention [J].
Beaucousin, Virginie ;
Cassotti, Mathieu ;
Simon, Gregory ;
Pineau, Arlette ;
Kostova, Milena ;
Houde, Olivier ;
Poirel, Nicolas .
NEUROPSYCHOLOGIA, 2011, 49 (05) :1258-1266
[6]   REVERSAL AND ROTATION ERRORS BY NORMAL AND RETARDED-READERS [J].
BLACK, FW .
PERCEPTUAL AND MOTOR SKILLS, 1973, 36 (03) :895-898
[7]   Cross-cultural effect on the brain revisited: Universal structures plus writing system variation [J].
Bolger, DJ ;
Perfetti, CA ;
Schneider, W .
HUMAN BRAIN MAPPING, 2005, 25 (01) :92-104
[8]   Developmental changes in human cerebral functional organization for word generation [J].
Brown, TT ;
Lugar, HM ;
Coalson, RS ;
Miezin, FM ;
Petersen, SE ;
Schlaggar, BL .
CEREBRAL CORTEX, 2005, 15 (03) :275-290
[9]   Role of left posterior superior temporal gyrus in phonological processing for speech perception and production [J].
Buchsbaum, BR ;
Hickok, G ;
Humphries, C .
COGNITIVE SCIENCE, 2001, 25 (05) :663-678
[10]   A developmental fMRI study of reading and repetition reveals changes in phonological and visual mechanisms over age [J].
Church, Jessica A. ;
Coalson, Rebecca S. ;
Lugar, Heather M. ;
Petersen, Steven E. ;
Schlaggar, Bradley L. .
CEREBRAL CORTEX, 2008, 18 (09) :2054-2065