Word learning and the cerebral hemispheres: from serial to parallel processing of written words

Author:

Ellis Andrew W.1,Ferreira Roberto1,Cathles-Hagan Polly1,Holt Kathryn1,Jarvis Lisa1,Barca Laura2

Affiliation:

1. Department of Psychology, University of York, York YO10 5DD, UK

2. Pediatric Rehabilitation Department, Children's Hospital Bambino Gesù-IRCCS, Lungomare G. Marconi 36, Santa Marinella, 00058 Rome, Italy

Abstract

Reading familiar words differs from reading unfamiliar non-words in two ways. First, word reading is faster and more accurate than reading of unfamiliar non-words. Second, effects of letter length are reduced for words, particularly when they are presented in the right visual field in familiar formats. Two experiments are reported in which right-handed participants read aloud non-words presented briefly in their left and right visual fields before and after training on those items. The non-words were interleaved with familiar words in the naming tests. Before training, naming was slow and error prone, with marked effects of length in both visual fields. After training, fewer errors were made, naming was faster, and the effect of length was much reduced in the right visual field compared with the left. We propose that word learning creates orthographic word forms in the mid-fusiform gyrus of the left cerebral hemisphere. Those word forms allow words to access their phonological and semantic representations on a lexical basis. But orthographic word forms also interact with more posterior letter recognition systems in the middle/inferior occipital gyri, inducing more parallel processing of right visual field words than is possible for any left visual field stimulus, or for unfamiliar non-words presented in the right visual field.

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology

Reference94 articles.

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4. Barca L. Cornelissen P. Simpson M. Urooj U. Woods W.& Ellis A. W. In preparation. Interhemispheric transfer and the right visual field advantage for word recognition: an MEG analysis.

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