How characters are learned leaves its mark on the neural substrates of Chinese reading

Jieyin Feng, Hoi Yan Mak, Jing Wang, Qing Cai

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

5 Scopus citations

Abstract

Understanding how the brain functions differently as one learns to read may shed light on the controversial nature of the reading ability of human being. Logographic writing system such as Chinese has been found to rely on specialized neural substrates beyond the reading network of alphabetic languages. The ability to read. Chinese has also been proposed to rely on writing skills. However, it was unclear whether the learning-related alteration of neural responses was language-specific or resulted from the more reliance on writing practice during acquisition. This study investigated whether the emergence of typical logographic-specific regions relied on learning by writing. We taught proficient alphabetic language readers Chinese characters and used pre- and post-tests to identify changes in two critical stages of reading, namely orthographic processing and orthographic-to-phonological mapping. Two typical left hemispheric areas for logographic reading showed increased responses to characters in the brains of proficient alphabetic readers after learning, regardless of whether the learning strategy involved writing practice. Moreover, learning strategy modulated the response magnitude or multivoxel patterns in the superior parietal lobule, left middle frontal gyrus, and right fusiform gyrus, some of which were task-dependent. The findings corroborated a limited role of writing emergence of logographic-specific reading network, and suggested the heterogeneous nature of different brain regions in this network.

Original languageEnglish
Article numberENEURO.0111-22.202
JournaleNeuro
Volume9
Issue number6
DOIs
StatePublished - 1 Nov 2022

Keywords

  • Chinese
  • reading
  • reading acquisition
  • second language learning
  • word recognition
  • writing

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'How characters are learned leaves its mark on the neural substrates of Chinese reading'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this