Abstract

The present fMRI study used a spelling task to investigate the hypothesis that the left ventral occipitotemporal cortex (vOT) hosts neuronal representations of whole written words. Such an orthographic word lexicon is posited by cognitive dual‐route theories of reading and spelling. In the scanner, participants performed a spelling task in which they had to indicate if a visually presented letter is present in the written form of an auditorily presented word. The main experimental manipulation distinguished between an orthographic word spelling condition in which correct spelling decisions had to be based on orthographic whole‐word representations, a word spelling condition in which reliance on orthographic whole‐word representations was optional and a phonological pseudoword spelling condition in which no reliance on such representations was possible. To evaluate spelling‐specific activations the spelling conditions were contrasted with control conditions that also presented auditory words and pseudowords, but participants had to indicate if a visually presented letter corresponded to the gender of the speaker. We identified a left vOT cluster activated for the critical orthographic word spelling condition relative to both the control condition and the phonological pseudoword spelling condition. Our results suggest that activation of left vOT during spelling can be attributed to the retrieval of orthographic whole‐word representations and, thus, support the position that the left vOT potentially represents the neuronal equivalent of the cognitive orthographic word lexicon. Hum Brain Mapp, 36:1393–1406, 2015. © 2014 The Authors Human Brain Mapping Published by Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

Highlights

  • One of the issues in the cognitive and neuroscientific study of reading processes concerns the existence of an orthographic word lexicon, that is, a memory system containing representations of the exact letter sequences of all known written words

  • The orthographic and the orthographic-phonological spelling condition were compared to the word control condition and the phonological spelling condition was compared to the pseudoword control condition

  • The present fMRI study provides support for the position that the left ventral occipitotemporal cortex (vOT) hosts neuronal representations coding for the exact letter strings of all known words

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Summary

Introduction

One of the issues in the cognitive and neuroscientific study of reading processes concerns the existence of an orthographic word lexicon, that is, a memory system containing representations of the exact letter sequences of all known written words Such orthographic whole-word representations are assumed by cognitive dual-route models of word reading [Coltheart et al, 2001; Perry et al, 2007]. The interactive account of vOT functioning by Price and Devlin [2011]—inspired by connectionist reading models—suggests that left vOT is an interface area linking generic visual input to higher-level associations such as phonology and meaning. This account explicitly denies experience-driven neuronal representations of whole words or sublexical orthographic features in left vOT

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