Reading Increases the Compositionality of Visual Word Representations

Author:

Agrawal Aakash1,Hari K. V. S.2,Arun S. P.3ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Centre for BioSystems Science and Engineering, Indian Institute of Science

2. Department of Electrical Communication Engineering, Indian Institute of Science

3. Centre for Neuroscience, Indian Institute of Science

Abstract

Reading causes widespread changes in the brain, but its effect on visual word representations is unknown. Learning to read may facilitate visual processing by forming specialized detectors for longer strings or by making word responses more predictable from single letters—that is, by increasing compositionality. We provided evidence for the latter hypothesis using experiments that compared nonoverlapping groups of readers of two Indian languages (Telugu and Malayalam). Readers showed increased single-letter discrimination and decreased letter interactions for bigrams during visual search. Importantly, these interactions predicted subjects’ overall reading fluency. In a separate brain-imaging experiment, we observed increased compositionality in readers, whereby responses to bigrams were more predictable from single letters. This effect was specific to the anterior lateral occipital region, where activations best matched behavior. Thus, learning to read facilitates visual processing by increasing the compositionality of visual word representations.

Funder

the wellcome trust dbt india alliance

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

General Psychology

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