Abstract
The brain areas involved in visual word processing rapidly become lateralized to the
left cerebral hemisphere. It is often assumed this is because in the vast majority of people
cortical structures underlying language production are lateralized to the left hemisphere. An
alternative hypothesis, however, might be that the early stages of visual word processing are
lateralized to the left hemisphere because of intrinsic hemispheric differences in processing
low-level visual information as required for distinguishing fine-grained visual forms such as
letters. If the alternative hypothesis were correct, we would expect posterior occipitotemporal
processing stages still to be lateralized to the left hemisphere for participants with
right hemisphere dominance for the frontal lobe processes involved in language production.
By analyzing event-related potentials of native readers of French with either left hemisphere
or right hemisphere dominance for language production (determined using a verb generation
task) we were able to show that the posterior occipito-temporal areas involved in visual word
processing are lateralized to the same hemisphere as language production. This finding could
suggest top-down influences in the development of posterior visual word processing areas
Original language | American English |
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Pages (from-to) | 672-681 |
Journal | Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience |
Volume | 20 |
Issue number | 4 |
State | Published - 2008 |