Does the visual word form area split in bilingual readers? A millimeter-scale 7-T fMRI study

Author:

Zhan Minye1ORCID,Pallier Christophe1ORCID,Agrawal Aakash1ORCID,Dehaene Stanislas12ORCID,Cohen Laurent34ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Cognitive Neuroimaging Unit, INSERM, CEA, CNRS, Université Paris-Saclay, NeuroSpin Center, 91191 Gif/Yvette, France.

2. Collège de France, Université Paris-Sciences-Lettres (PSL), 11 Place Marcelin Berthelot, 75005 Paris, France.

3. Inserm U 1127, CNRS UMR 7225, Sorbonne Université, Institut du Cerveau, ICM, Paris, France.

4. AP-HP, Hôpital de la Pitié Salpêtrière, Fédération de Neurologie, Paris, France.

Abstract

In expert readers, a brain region known as the visual word form area (VWFA) is highly sensitive to written words, exhibiting a posterior-to-anterior gradient of increasing sensitivity to orthographic stimuli whose statistics match those of real words. Using high-resolution 7-tesla functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI), we ask whether, in bilingual readers, distinct cortical patches specialize for different languages. In 21 English-French bilinguals, unsmoothed 1.2-millimeters fMRI revealed that the VWFA is actually composed of several small cortical patches highly selective for reading, with a posterior-to-anterior word-similarity gradient, but with near-complete overlap between the two languages. In 10 English-Chinese bilinguals, however, while most word-specific patches exhibited similar reading specificity and word-similarity gradients for reading in Chinese and English, additional patches responded specifically to Chinese writing and, unexpectedly, to faces. Our results show that the acquisition of multiple writing systems can indeed tune the visual cortex differently in bilinguals, sometimes leading to the emergence of cortical patches specialized for a single language.

Publisher

American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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