Lin Chong-Yu, Xiao Zhuang-Wei, Shen Li, Zhang John X, Weng Xu-Chu
Laboratory for Higher Brain Function, Institute of Psychology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing, China.
Neuroreport. 2007 Oct 8;18(15):1621-5. doi: 10.1097/WNR.0b013e3282f0405b.
This event-related functional MRI study examined the neural correlates for Chinese writing, by comparing the writing of logographic characters and that of pinyin, a phonetic notation system for Chinese characters. The temporal profile of the activations indicated that the middle frontal gyrus, superior parietal lobule, and posterior inferior temporal gyrus reflected more central processes for writing. Although pinyin writing elicited greater activity overall than character writing, the critical finding is that the two types of symbols recruited essentially the same brain regions. The results were compared with studies in Japanese showing dissociation between logographic kanji and phonetic kana writing and frequency of use was suggested to be an important factor in accounting for result differences across the two writing systems.
这项与事件相关的功能磁共振成像研究,通过比较象形汉字书写和拼音(一种汉字的音标系统)书写,来检验中文书写的神经关联。激活的时间特征表明,额中回、顶上小叶和颞下回反映了书写中更核心的过程。尽管拼音书写总体上比汉字书写引发了更大的活动,但关键发现是这两种符号所激活的脑区基本相同。研究结果与针对日语的研究进行了比较,后者显示象形汉字和拼音假名书写之间存在分离,且使用频率被认为是解释两种书写系统结果差异的一个重要因素。