Title
Why do children make mirror errors in reading? Neural correlates of mirror invariance in the visual word form area.
Abstract
Young children often make mirror errors when learning to read and write, for instance writing their first name from right to left in English. This competence vanishes in most adult readers, who typically cannot read mirror words but retain a strong competence for mirror recognition of images. We used fast behavioral and fMRI repetition priming to probe the brain mechanisms underlying mirror generalization and its absence for words in adult readers. In two groups of French and Japanese readers, we show that the left fusiform visual word form area, a major site of learning during reading acquisition, simultaneously shows a maximal effect of mirror priming for pictures and an absence of mirror priming for words. Thus, learning to read recruits an area which possesses a property of mirror invariance, seemingly present in all primates, which is deleterious for letter recognition and may explain children's transient mirror errors.
Year
DOI
Venue
2010
10.1016/j.neuroimage.2009.09.024
NeuroImage
Keywords
Field
DocType
repetition priming
Developmental psychology,Neural correlates of consciousness,Visual word form area,Invariant (physics),Letter recognition,Psychology,Priming (psychology),Cognitive psychology,Repetition priming,Learning to read,Right-to-left
Journal
Volume
Issue
ISSN
49
2
1053-8119
Citations 
PageRank 
References 
7
0.83
10
Authors
6
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Ghislaine Dehaene-Lambertz163364.77
Kimihiro Nakamura2303.80
Antoinette Jobert313511.69
Chihiro Kuroki470.83
Seiji Ogawa5132.35
Laurent Cohen6788.05