Uno Tomoki, Takano Kouji, Nakamura Kimihiro
Section of Systems Neuroscience, National Rehabilitation Center for Persons with Disabilities, Tokorozawa 359-8555, Japan.
Section of Systems Neuroscience, National Rehabilitation Center for Persons with Disabilities, Tokorozawa 359-8555, Japan
J Neurosci. 2025 Jan 8;45(2):e0194242024. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.0194-24.2024.
Cognitive models of reading assume that speech production occurs after visual and phonological processing of written words. This traditional view is at odds with more recent magnetoencephalography studies showing that the left posterior inferior frontal cortex (pIFC) classically associated with spoken production responds to print at 100-150 ms after word-onset, almost simultaneously with posterior brain regions for visual and phonological processing. Yet the theoretical significance of this fast neural response remains open to date. We used transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) to investigate how the left pIFC contributes to the early stage of reading. In Experiment 1, 23 adult participants (14 females) performed three different tasks about written words (oral reading, semantic judgment, and perceptual judgment) while single-pulse TMS was delivered to the left pIFC, fusiform gyrus or supramarginal gyrus at different time points (50-200 ms after word-onset). A robust double dissociation was found between tasks and stimulation sites-oral reading, but not other control tasks, was disrupted only when TMS was delivered to pIFC at 100 ms. This task-specific impact of pIFC stimulation was further corroborated in Experiment 2, which revealed another double dissociation between oral reading and picture naming. These results demonstrate that the left pIFC specifically and causally mediates rapid computation of speech motor codes at the earliest stage of reading and suggest that this fast sublexical neural pathway for pronunciation, although seemingly dormant, is fully functioning in literate adults. Our results further suggest that these left-hemisphere systems for reading overall act faster than known previously.
阅读的认知模型假定,言语产生发生在对书面文字进行视觉和语音处理之后。这种传统观点与最近的脑磁图研究结果不一致,这些研究表明,传统上与言语产生相关的左后下额叶皮层(pIFC)在单词开始后100 - 150毫秒对印刷文字做出反应,几乎与用于视觉和语音处理的后脑区域同时反应。然而,这种快速神经反应的理论意义至今仍不明确。我们使用经颅磁刺激(TMS)来研究左pIFC如何在阅读的早期阶段发挥作用。在实验1中,23名成年参与者(14名女性)在对书面文字执行三项不同任务(口头阅读、语义判断和知觉判断)时,在不同时间点(单词开始后50 - 200毫秒)将单脉冲TMS施加到左pIFC、梭状回或缘上回。在任务和刺激部位之间发现了一种强有力的双重分离——只有当在100毫秒时将TMS施加到pIFC时,口头阅读而不是其他控制任务才会受到干扰。pIFC刺激的这种任务特异性影响在实验2中得到了进一步证实,该实验揭示了口头阅读和图片命名之间的另一种双重分离。这些结果表明,左pIFC在阅读的最早阶段特异性地且因果性地介导了言语运动代码的快速计算,并表明这种用于发音的快速次词汇神经通路,尽管看似处于休眠状态,但在有读写能力的成年人中是完全起作用的。我们的结果进一步表明,这些左半球阅读系统总体上比之前已知的运作得更快。