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Reading ability requires the coordination of many cognitive processes to be effective, including spatial attention. Recent functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) evidence from Ekstrand et al. (2019) suggests that lexical reading is more associated with reflexive attentional orienting regions, whereas sublexical reading is more associated with voluntary attentional orienting regions. The current research sought to further examine the neuroanatomical relationship between reading and attention using a novel experimental design in fMRI. Participants performed four hybrid attentional orienting and reading-aloud tasks, where a reflexive or voluntary spatial cue preceded a lexical or sublexical target. Results indicated that lexical reading resulted in greater activation in the right temporoparietal junction, a reflexive orienting region. Sublexical reading resulted in greater activation in the left inferior frontal gyrus, left fusiform and inferior temporal gyrus, and right superior parietal lobule and intraparietal sulcus (voluntary orienting regions). Further, we found an interaction between reading and attention in the middle occipital gyrus. This study provides the most direct evidence to date that lexical and sublexical reading recruit differential attentional orienting regions during single-word reading in skilled readers. Implications for models of reading and attention, as well as for strategic remediation of their dysfunction, are discussed.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.cortex.2019.08.006 | DOI Listing |
Neuroimage
August 2025
Department of Behavioral Neurology and Cognitive Neuroscience, Tohoku University Graduate School of Medicine, Japan. Electronic address:
Reading engages complex neural networks integrating visual, phonological, and semantic information. The dual-stream model posits ventral and dorsal pathways for lexical and sublexical processing in the left hemisphere and is well-supported in alphabetic languages. However, its applicability to non-alphabetic scripts remains unclear.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFClin Neurophysiol
May 2025
Department of Cognitive Neuroscience, Faculty of Psychology and Neuroscience, Maastricht University, The Netherlands; Maastricht Brain Imaging Center, Faculty of Psychology and Neuroscience, Maastricht University, The Netherlands.
Objective: Sensitivity to sublexical speech features is important for successful reading development. Here we assessed the processing of formal (phonological) and temporal (syllable stress) sublexical speech regularities in typical and dyslexic readers.
Methods: We tested Dutch-speaking, typical and dyslexic adult readers in a passive EEG oddball paradigm, manipulating phonotactic probability (formal) and syllable stress (temporal) in Dutch pseudowords.
Ann Dyslexia
July 2025
Department of Special Education, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, USA.
Word reading disabilities (WRD) represent the most common disability in reading; however, questions remain regarding how to design instruction that results in significant, long-lasting effects on word reading outcomes for individuals who experience considerable difficulties that persist within and beyond primary grades. Two related studies examined effects of variations in targeted sublexical content on word reading efficiency of students in grades 2-4 with WRD. Study 1 addressed effects of instruction and practice targeting complex vs.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAtten Percept Psychophys
July 2025
Centre de Recherche en Psychologie Et Neurosciences, Aix-Marseille Université & CNRS, Aix-en-Provence, France.
Speech input like [byt] has been shown to facilitate not only the subsequent processing of an identical target word /byt/ but also that of a target word /tyb/ that contains the same phonemes in a different order. In the TISK model of spoken word recognition (Hannagan et al., Frontiers in psychology, 4, 563, 2013), this transposed-phoneme priming effect could result from the activation of shared position-independent phonemes (i.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Exp Child Psychol
August 2025
Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences, City University of Macau, Macau 999078, China.
The nature of the relation between orthographic knowledge and vocabulary in second language (L2) English learners remains relatively unclear. The current study investigated how orthographic knowledge facets, as well as morphological awareness, were concurrently related to vocabulary knowledge. A group of 241 eighth-grade Chinese learners of English as a foreign language (EFL) were administered measures of phonological awareness, orthographic knowledge (lexical and sublexical orthographic knowledge), morphological awareness (morpheme recognition and morpheme discrimination), and vocabulary knowledge.
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