TY - GEN
T1 - Different occipito-temporal activations in Chinese literate and illiterate subjects during Chinese character processing
AU - Qi, Ge Qi
AU - Li, Xiujun
AU - Yan, Tianyi
AU - Wu, Jinglong
AU - Guo, Qiyong
PY - 2010
Y1 - 2010
N2 - Recent imaging studies have identified a region in occipito-temporal cortex essential for reading and labeled it as the visual word form area (VWFA). Several studies suggested that the development of this word specific region is closely related to the experience with words. In this study, two groups of Chinese subjects, one literate and the other illiterate, were asked to compare two Chinese characters presented at left and right side of a fixation point and decide whether they were the same character or not. Similar comparison of simple figures was used as control condition. We found stronger activation to Chinese characters than to simple figures in left and right hemispheric occipito-temporal regions in both literate and illiterate subjects. However, at the peak voxels revealed by Chinese character and simple figure contrast, the response to Chinese character stimuli in left occipito-temporal region of literate subjects was significantly stronger than that in the right one, whereas in illiterate subjects no such hemispheric preference was observed. We propose that the enhancement of the left peak voxel activation in literate group is due to their long-time acquaintance with reading.
AB - Recent imaging studies have identified a region in occipito-temporal cortex essential for reading and labeled it as the visual word form area (VWFA). Several studies suggested that the development of this word specific region is closely related to the experience with words. In this study, two groups of Chinese subjects, one literate and the other illiterate, were asked to compare two Chinese characters presented at left and right side of a fixation point and decide whether they were the same character or not. Similar comparison of simple figures was used as control condition. We found stronger activation to Chinese characters than to simple figures in left and right hemispheric occipito-temporal regions in both literate and illiterate subjects. However, at the peak voxels revealed by Chinese character and simple figure contrast, the response to Chinese character stimuli in left occipito-temporal region of literate subjects was significantly stronger than that in the right one, whereas in illiterate subjects no such hemispheric preference was observed. We propose that the enhancement of the left peak voxel activation in literate group is due to their long-time acquaintance with reading.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=77957801292&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1109/ICCME.2010.5558858
DO - 10.1109/ICCME.2010.5558858
M3 - Conference contribution
AN - SCOPUS:77957801292
SN - 9781424468430
T3 - 2010 IEEE/ICME International Conference on Complex Medical Engineering, CME2010
SP - 134
EP - 137
BT - 2010 IEEE/ICME International Conference on Complex Medical Engineering, CME2010
T2 - 2010 IEEE/ICME International Conference on Complex Medical Engineering, CME2010
Y2 - 13 July 2010 through 15 July 2010
ER -