Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
7313581 | Cortex | 2016 | 16 Pages |
Abstract
Competitive Scrabble players devote considerable time to studying words and practicing Scrabble-related skills (e.g., anagramming). This training is associated with extraordinary performance in lexical decision, the standard visual word recognition task (Hargreaves, Pexman, Zdrazilova & Sargious, 2012). In the present study we investigated the neural consequences of this lexical expertise. Using both event-related and resting-state fMRI, we compared brain activity and connectivity in 12 competitive Scrabble experts with 12 matched non-expert controls. Results showed that when engaged in the lexical decision task (LDT), Scrabble experts made use of brain regions not generally associated with meaning retrieval in visual word recognition, but rather those associated with working memory and visual perception. The analysis of resting-state data also showed group differences, such that a different network of brain regions was associated with higher levels of Scrabble-related skill in experts than in controls.
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Behavioral Neuroscience
Authors
Andrea B. Protzner, Ian S. Hargreaves, James A. Campbell, Kaia Myers-Stewart, Sophia van Hees, Bradley G. Goodyear, Peter Sargious, Penny M. Pexman,