Abstract

The study compared the brain activation patterns associated with the comprehension of written and spoken Portuguese sentences. An fMRI study measured brain activity while participants read and listened to sentences about general world knowledge. Participants had to decide if the sentences were true or false. To mirror the transient nature of spoken sentences, visual input was presented in rapid serial visual presentation format. The results showed a common core of amodal left inferior frontal and middle temporal gyri activation, as well as modality specific brain activation associated with listening and reading comprehension. Reading comprehension was associated with more left-lateralized activation and with left inferior occipital cortex (including fusiform gyrus) activation. Listening comprehension was associated with extensive bilateral temporal cortex activation and more overall activation of the whole cortex. Results also showed individual differences in brain activation for reading comprehension. Readers with lower working memory capacity showed more activation of right-hemisphere areas (spillover of activation) and more activation in the prefrontal cortex, potentially associated with more demand placed on executive control processes. Readers with higher working memory capacity showed more activation in a frontal-posterior network of areas (left angular and precentral gyri, and right inferior frontal gyrus). The activation of this network may be associated with phonological rehearsal of linguistic information when reading text presented in rapid serial visual format. The study demonstrates the modality fingerprints for language comprehension and indicates how low- and high working memory capacity readers deal with reading text presented in serial format.

Highlights

  • Linguistic information can be conveyed in the form of speech and written text, but it is the content of the message that is essential for the higher-level processes in language comprehension, such as making inferences and associations between text information and knowledge about the world

  • Individual differences in brain activation for reading comprehension The results show that the ratio of voxels recruited in the left hemisphere versus voxels recruited in the right hemisphere was positively correlated with reading span scores (r = .76; p < .01)

  • The results demonstrate the modality fingerprints for brain activation for listening and reading comprehension of Portuguese sentences and the brain activation associated with individual differences in reading text presented in serial format

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Summary

Introduction

Linguistic information can be conveyed in the form of speech and written text, but it is the content of the message that is essential for the higher-level processes in language comprehension, such as making inferences and associations between text information and knowledge about the world. The goal of this study was to investigate the brain activation for listening and reading comprehension processes and the effects of modality of language input on brain activation for language comprehension. Behavioral studies have shown that listening and reading comprehension are two closely-related skills. Skilled readers retrieve phonological information faster and more automatically than less skilled readers (Booth, Perfetti, & MacWhinney, 1999; Booth, Perfetti, MacWhinney, & Hunt, 2000). Successful reading relies on an interaction between decoding linguistic visual input and accessing phonological information

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