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Behavior, Cognition and Neuroscience
Volume 11, 2005 - Issue 5
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Original Articles

Cognitive and neural mechanisms underlying reading and naming: Evidence from letter-by-letter reading and optic aphasia

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Pages 325-337 | Received 27 Aug 2004, Accepted 03 Feb 2005, Published online: 16 Feb 2007
 

Abstract

We report detailed analysis of language performance in a patient, RMI, a 55-year-old man who presented with a homonymous hemianopsia, optic aphasia, and alexia without agraphia (with letter-by-letter reading) acutely after stroke. MRI showed infarct in the left occipital and medial temporal lobe and hypoperfusion of the entire posterior cerebral artery territory, including the splenium. Extensive language testing revealed severely impaired picture naming and oral reading, with relatively spared tactile naming and recognition of orally spelled words, consistent with impaired access to lexical and semantic representations from vision. In addition, he had a milder deficit in accessing lexical representations for output from all input modalities. RMI’s execution of various language tasks provided considerable insight into the mechanisms that underlie oral reading. His performance indicated that both semantic access and orthographic to phonologic conversion mechanisms were partially intact. When information from these two impoverished systems was coupled (the picture of an object presented with its written name), his ability to read/name improved significantly, consistent with the hypothesis that partially accessed semantic information from vision can combine with partially accessed sublexical orthographic to phonologic conversion mechanisms to access phonological representations for output. Furthermore, his written word and picture recognition improved to normal at a time when magnetic resonance perfusion imaging demonstrated reperfusion of the splenium. We interpret these results, as well as results from previous studies in the literature, within a model of the neural regions critical for various cognitive processes underlying reading.

Acknowledgments

We are grateful to RMI for his cheerful participation in this study. The research reported in this article was supported by a Student Scholarship in Cardiovascular Disease and Stroke from the American Heart Association to EBM, as well as by an NIDCD grant (RO1 DC05375) and an NINDS grant, ROI NS047691 to AH. The authors gratefully acknowledge this support.

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