Department of Pediatrics, Center for the Study of Learning, Georgetown University Washington, DC, USA.
Front Psychol. 2011 Oct 11;2:239. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2011.00239. eCollection 2011.
Producing written words requires "central" cognitive processes (such as orthographic long-term and working memory) as well as more peripheral processes responsible for generating the motor actions needed for producing written words in a variety of formats (handwriting, typing, etc.). In recent years, various functional neuroimaging studies have examined the neural substrates underlying the central and peripheral processes of written word production. This study provides the first quantitative meta-analysis of these studies by applying activation likelihood estimation (ALE) methods (Turkeltaub et al., 2002). For alphabet languages, we identified 11 studies (with a total of 17 experimental contrasts) that had been designed to isolate central and/or peripheral processes of word spelling (total number of participants = 146). Three ALE meta-analyses were carried out. One involved the complete set of 17 contrasts; two others were applied to subsets of contrasts to distinguish the neural substrates of central from peripheral processes. These analyses identified a network of brain regions reliably associated with the central and peripheral processes of word spelling. Among the many significant results, is the finding that the regions with the greatest correspondence across studies were in the left inferior temporal/fusiform gyri and left inferior frontal gyrus. Furthermore, although the angular gyrus (AG) has traditionally been identified as a key site within the written word production network, none of the meta-analyses found it to be a consistent site of activation, identifying instead a region just superior/medial to the left AG in the left posterior intraparietal sulcus. These meta-analyses and the discussion of results provide a valuable foundation upon which future studies that examine the neural basis of written word production can build.
产生书面文字需要“中央”认知过程(如正字法长期记忆和工作记忆)以及负责产生各种格式(手写、打字等)书面文字所需的外围运动动作的更外围过程。近年来,各种功能神经影像学研究检查了书面文字产生的中央和外围过程的神经基础。本研究通过应用激活似然估计 (ALE) 方法 (Turkeltaub 等人,2002 年) 对这些研究进行了首次定量荟萃分析。对于字母语言,我们确定了 11 项旨在分离单词拼写的中央和/或外围过程的研究(共有 17 个实验对比;总参与者人数为 146 人)。进行了三项 ALE 荟萃分析。一项涉及 17 个对比的完整集合;另外两项应用于对比的子集,以区分中央和外围过程的神经基础。这些分析确定了与单词拼写的中央和外围过程可靠相关的大脑区域网络。在许多重要结果中,发现研究之间对应性最大的区域是左颞叶/梭状回和左额下回。此外,尽管角回 (AG) 传统上被确定为书面文字产生网络中的关键部位,但荟萃分析均未发现它是激活的一致部位,而是在左后顶内沟中左 AG 的上方/内侧识别出一个区域。这些荟萃分析和结果讨论为未来检查书面文字产生的神经基础的研究提供了有价值的基础。