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Neural mechanisms of visually presented word recognition Norio FUJIMAKI 1 , Satoru MIYAUCHI 1 1Auditory and Visual Informatics Section, Communications Research Laboratory, Ministry of Posts & Telecommunications Keyword: カナ , 疑似文字 , 形態 , 音韻 , 意味 pp.528-540
Published Date 1999/8/10
DOI https://doi.org/10.11477/mf.1431901071
  • Abstract
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This review summarizes a recent experiment conducted using fMRI and MEG to measure neural activation related to lexico-semantic, phonological and orthographic (more generally visual form) processes for the visually presented Japanese katakana (phonogram) characters, pseudocharacters, and strings of them. It also compared the present results with other reports which describe experiments conducted mainly in English using PET, fMRI and MEG. Activity related to the visual form process was observed at a latency range of 80 to 220 ms in the occipital and ventral-temporal areas, while the activity related to the phonological process was observed at latencies later than 190 ms in the left superior temporal sulcus, supramarginal gyrus, and Broca's area. These activation foci were also reported for English letters and words in many references. The present activation was the same between katakana characters and pseudocharacters, and between katakana strings or words and pseudocharacter strings, thus suggesting that there is no “word-form center” specific to real katakana words. Further, the activation occurred in both hemispheres for single characters, but were left-lateralized for strings of characters. The activation for the semantic process could not be dissociated from that for the other processes; however, there is a possibility that the semantic process shared activation foci with the phonological process, e.g., near the superior temporal sulcus. The present experiment showed no activation in the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex or the middle or inferior temporal areas, which have been reported to be active for semantic processes, suggesting that neural activation varies depending on semantic task demands.


Copyright © 1999, Igaku-Shoin Ltd. All rights reserved.

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電子版ISSN 1882-1243 印刷版ISSN 0001-8724 医学書院

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