FYI
In collaboration with Frontiers in Neuroscience, we are currently
organizing a Research Topic, "What makes written words so special to the
brain?", and as host editors we think that this topic could be of
interest to some of you.
The proposed structure of this Research Topic is provided below.
Host journal: Frontiers in Human Neuroscience
Research Topic Title: What makes written words so special to the brain?
Topic Editors:
Mohamed L Seghier, UCL, United Kingdom.
Urs Maurer, University of Zurich, Switzerland.
Gui Xue, Beijing Normal University, China.
Description: Reading is an integral part of life in today’s
information-driven societies. Since the pioneering work of Dejerine on
“word blindness” in brain-lesioned patients, the literature has
increased exponentially, from neuropsychological case reports to
mechanistic accounts of word processing at the behavioural,
neurofunctional and computational levels, tapping into diverse aspects
of visual word processing. These studies have revealed some exciting
findings about visual word processing, including how the brain learns to
read, how changes in literacy impact upon word processing strategies,
and whether word processing mechanisms vary across different alphabetic,
logographic or artificial writing systems. Other studies have attempted
to characterise typical and atypical word processes in special
populations in order to explain why dyslexic brains struggle with words,
how multilingualism changes the way our brains see words, and what the
exact developmental signatures are that would shape the acquisition of
reading skills. Exciting new insights have also emerged from recent
studies that have investigated word stimuli at the system/network level,
by looking, for instance, at how the reading system interacts with other
cognitive systems in a context-dependent fashion, how visual language
stimuli are integrated into the speech processing streams, how both left
and right hemispheres cooperate and interact during word processing, and
what the exact contributions of subcortical and cerebellar regions to
reading are.
The goal of this Special Topic is to highlight the latest findings
regarding the different issues mentioned above, particularly how these
findings can explain or model the different processes, mechanisms,
pathways or cognitive strategies by which the human brain sees words,
how they can deepen our understanding of the mechanisms of individual
differences in learning to read and reading development, and how they
can guide the discovery of novel diagnostic tools for reading disorders
and the development of novel interventional approaches. We aim to
collect innovative contributions that shed further light on the
mechanisms of visual word processing. We welcome original research
submissions of any study that used word stimuli in healthy or clinical
populations, children or adults, with behavioral paradigms, structural
(DTI, MRI, lesion mapping), resting and task functional imaging (fMRI,
MEG, EEG), or neuro-stimulation (TMS, tDCS) techniques. We also welcome
critical reviews, meta-analyses, mini-reviews and perspective papers
which offer provocative and insightful interpretations of the recent
literature that challenge current understanding of word processing or
develop novel mechanistic accounts of any aspect of word processing.
Computational modelling studies are also welcome. This special Research
Topic aims to provide a forum for state-of-the-art research in this field.
Article Submission Deadline: Apr 30, 2013
For more details, see:
http://www.frontiersin.org/Human_Neuroscience/researchtopics/What_makes_wri…
We look forward to hearing from you...
With best regards,
Mohamed L Seghier
Urs Maurer
Gui Xue