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21
The neural basis of surface dyslexia in semantic dementia
Abstract: Semantic dementia (SD) is a neurodegenerative disease characterized by atrophy of anterior temporal regions and progressive loss of semantic memory. SD patients often present with surface dyslexia, a relatively selective impairment in reading low-frequency words with exceptional or atypical spelling-to-sound correspondences. Exception words are typically ‘over-regularized’ in SD and pronounced as they are spelled (e.g. ‘sew’ is pronounced as ‘sue’). This suggests that in the absence of sufficient item-specific knowledge, exception words are read by relying mainly on subword processes for regular mapping of orthography to phonology. In this study, we investigated the functional anatomy of surface dyslexia in SD using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) and studied its relationship to structural damage with voxel-based morphometry (VBM). Five SD patients and nine healthy age-matched controls were scanned while they read regular words, exception words and pseudowords in an event-related design. Vocal responses were recorded and revealed that all patients were impaired in reading low-frequency exception words, and made frequent over-regularization errors. Consistent with prior studies, fMRI data revealed that both groups activated a similar basic network of bilateral occipital, motor and premotor regions for reading single words. VBM showed that these regions were not significantly atrophied in SD. In control subjects, a region in the left intraparietal sulcus was activated for reading pseudowords and low-frequency regular words but not exception words, suggesting a role for this area in subword mapping from orthographic to phonological representations. In SD patients only, this inferior parietal region, which was not atrophied, was also activated by reading low-frequency exception words, especially on trials where over-regularization errors occurred. These results suggest that the left intraparietal sulcus is involved in subword reading processes that are differentially recruited in SD when word-specific information is lost. This loss is likely related to degeneration of the anterior temporal lobe, which was severely atrophied in SD. Consistent with this, left mid-fusiform and superior temporal regions that showed reading-related activations in controls were not activated in SD. Taken together, these results suggest that the left inferior parietal region subserves subword orthographic-to-phonological processes that are recruited for exception word reading when retrieval of exceptional, item-specific word forms is impaired by degeneration of the anterior temporal lobe.
Keyword: Original Articles
URL: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19022856
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2638692
https://doi.org/10.1093/brain/awn300
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22
The neural basis of surface dyslexia in semantic dementia
Wilson, Stephen M.; Brambati, Simona M.; Henry, Roland G.. - : Oxford University Press, 2008
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23
The logopenic/phonological variant of primary progressive aphasia
Miller, Bruce L.; Perani, Daniela; Dronkers, Nina. - : American Academy of Neurology, 2008
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24
Clinical and anatomical correlates of apraxia of speech
In: Brain & language. - Orlando, Fla. [u.a.] : Elsevier 97 (2006) 3, 343-350
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OLC Linguistik
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25
An overview on Primary Progressive Aphasia and its variants.
In: Amici, Serena; Gorno-Tempini, Maria Luisa; Ogar, Jennifer M; Dronkers, Nina F; & Miller, Bruce L. (2006). An overview on Primary Progressive Aphasia and its variants. Behavioural neurology, 17(2), 77 - 87. UC San Francisco: Retrieved from: http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/9xh4147g (2006)
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26
An Overview on Primary Progressive Aphasia and Its Variants
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27
Anatomical correlates of early mutism in progressive nonfluent aphasia
Gorno-Tempini, Maria Luisa; Ogar, Jennifer M.; Brambati, Simona Maria. - : American Academy of Neurology, 2006
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28
Brain areas involved in speech production
In: Brain. - Oxford : Oxford Univ. Press 127 (2004) 7, 1461-1462
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29
Cognition and Anatomy in Three Variants of Primary Progressive Aphasia
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30
29th Clinical Aphasiology Conference
Kearns, Kevin P. (Hrsg.); Elman, Roberta J. (Mitarb.); Ogar, Jennifer M. (Mitarb.)...
In: Aphasiology. - London [u.a.] : Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group 14 (2000) 5-6, 453-679
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