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Diagnosis of alexia has historically focused on syndromes such as surface alexia, which capture discrete patterns of reading deficits observed in some patients but do not describe the breadth of reading deficits observed in practice. Aphasia research has recently shifted focus to language process impairments rather than syndromic classifications. A similar shift in focus to reading process impairments might improve our diagnostic approach to alexia. Behavioural evidence suggests that semantic processing influences reading aloud and that semantic deficits in the context of semantic dementia underlie surface alexia. Because stroke rarely causes loss of semantic knowledge and surface alexia as a syndromic diagnosis is unusual after stroke, semantic reading deficits in stroke alexia have not previously been examined systematically. Semantic reading deficits in stroke may not relate to semantic deficits per se, but rather an inability to use semantics to support reading. Imageability, the degree to which a word brings to mind an image, is one index of semantic influences on reading. High-imageability words are read more quickly by healthy persons and more accurately following brain damage. Here, we test whether deficits of semantic reading after stroke, as indexed by reduced imageability effects, result from semantic or post-semantic processes. Examining non-verbal semantic processing, semantics-phonology mapping and semantic control in 56 left-hemisphere stroke survivors, only better semantics-phonology mapping ability predicted better accuracy on high-imageability words. Neither semantic nor post-semantic scores related to low-imageability word accuracy. Support vector regression voxel-based lesion symptom mapping revealed that damage along the superior temporal sulcus and underlying white matter, extending into the middle and superior temporal gyri, reduced the advantage of high-imageability over low-imageability words during reading, reflecting an inability to use semantics to support reading. A similar cluster related to impairments in semantics-phonology mapping. The imageability and semantics-phonology mapping results overlapped in the left posterior superior temporal sulcus. Support vector regression connectome lesion symptom mapping revealed that white matter disconnections within a broad temporoparietal network important for phonological and semantic processing were associated with a reduction of the imageability advantage during reading. These results demonstrate that, irrespective of syndromic classification, semantic reading deficits occur in left-hemisphere stroke survivors owing to impaired integration of semantic and phonological representations and that the left posterior superior temporal sulcus underlies this process. Our results clarify the neurobiology of reading aloud and support the existence of a post-semantic impairment of semantic reading in left-hemisphere stroke survivors.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/brain/awaf253 | DOI Listing |
Brain
September 2025
Center for Brain Plasticity and Recovery, Center for Aphasia Research and Rehabilitation, Departments of Neurology and Rehabilitation Medicine, Georgetown University Medical Center, Washington, DC, 20057 USA.
The role of the right hemisphere in aphasia recovery has been controversial since the 19th century. Imaging studies have sometimes found increased activation in right hemisphere regions homotopic to canonical left hemisphere language regions, but these results have been questioned due to small sample sizes, unreliable imaging tasks, and task performance confounds that affect right hemisphere activation levels even in neurologically healthy adults. Several principles of right hemisphere language recruitment in aphasia have been proposed based on these studies: that the right hemisphere is recruited primarily by individuals with severe left hemisphere damage, that transcallosal disinhibition results in recruitment of right hemisphere regions homotopic to the lesion, and that increased right hemisphere activation diminishes to baseline levels over time.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNeuroscience
September 2025
Department of Psychology & Health Studies, University of Saskatchewan, Saskatoon, Canada. Electronic address:
Attentional processes are crucial to ensure successful reading, and theories of dyslexia propose that dysfunctional attention networks may contribute to the observed reading deficits. The goals of this study were to localize a region of the frontal-eye-field (FEF) involved in both reading and attention and examine its connectivity with regions in the reading and attention networks, given the known role of the FEF in attentional processes and theorized role in reading. In Experiment 1, we revisited the results of our previous hybrid reading and attention study.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Speech Lang Hear Res
September 2025
School of Humanities, Shanghai Jiao Tong University, China.
Purpose: This study aimed to investigate the changes and deterioration in lexical processing caused by Alzheimer's disease (AD). It analyzed the differences in lexical processing between individuals with healthy controls, mild AD, and moderate AD as well as how these groups processed varying lexical aspects.
Method: A total of 180 older adults participated in the experiment, including 60 healthy controls, 60 with mild AD, and 60 with moderate AD.
Q J Exp Psychol (Hove)
August 2025
School of Psychology, Shaanxi Key Laboratory of Behavior and Cognitive Neuroscience Shaanxi Normal University, Xi'an 710062, China.
The reading of external negated disjunctions (a disjunction as a clause is externally negated) is an interdisciplinary issue addressed by logic, linguistics and psychology. For external negated disjunctions, we investigated how their possibility judgments varied with their two expression forms: NTSs (not-true sentences) with the form It is not true that p or q or both versus DSs (deny-sentences) with the form Someone denied that p or q or both). We propose the semantic negation scope account for the question with the hypothesis of the effect of expression form of negation that a NTS will more often elicit the weak local negation strategy that people consider cases negating at least one of the disjuncts as possible, and judge p¬q, ¬pq, and ¬p¬q as possible; while a DS will more often elicit the strong global negation strategy that people consider only cases negating all disjuncts as possible, and judge only ¬p¬q as possible.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFQ J Exp Psychol (Hove)
August 2025
School of Psychology and Humanities, University of Lancashire.
Parafoveal preprocessing of upcoming words is a key aspect of fluent reading. A comparative analysis of how children's orthographic, phonological and semantic parafoveal processing changes with age has not been investigated to date. In the present study, three eye movement experiments used the boundary paradigm to characterize the nature of change in orthographic, phonological and semantic parafoveal processing across children in Grades 2-5 (n = 366, Tianjin Primary School) and adults (n = 90, Tianjin Normal University) during natural Chinese reading.
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