| Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type | 
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 6027399 | NeuroImage | 2014 | 10 Pages | 
Abstract
												The exact role of the left ventral occipitotemporal cortex (VOTC) during the initial stages of reading acquisition is a hotly debated issue, especially regarding the comparative effect of learning on early stimulus-dependent vs. later task-dependent processes. We show that this controversy can be solved with high-temporal resolution intracerebral EEG recordings of the VOTC. We measured High-Frequency Activity (50-150 Hz) as a proxy of population-level spiking activity while participants learned Japanese Katakana symbols, and found that learning primarily affects top-down/task-dependent neural processing, after a few minutes only. In contrast, adaptation of early bottom-up/stimulus-dependent processing takes several days to adapt and provides the basis for fluent reading. Such evidence that two consecutive stages of neural processing, stimulus- and task-dependent are differentially affected by learning, can reconcile seemingly opposite hypotheses on the role of the VOTC during reading acquisition.
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											Authors
												M. Perrone-Bertolotti, J.R. Vidal, L. de Palma, C.M. Hamamé, T. Ossandon, P. Kahane, L. Minotti, O. Bertrand, J.-P. Lachaux, 
											